Sunday, January 31, 2016

TOO CLOSE TO SEE

January 31, 2016
Epiphany 4
Jeremiah 1:4-10
Luke 4:21-30
(prayer)
A mother held her new baby and very slowly rocked him back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. And while she held him, she sang:
I'll love you forever,
I'll like you for always,
As long as I'm living
my baby you'll be.

The baby grew. He grew and he grew and he grew. He grew until he was two years old... At night time, when that two-year-old was quiet, she opened the door to his room, crawled across the floor, looked up over the side of his bed; and if he was really asleep she picked him up and rocked him back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. While she rocked him she sang:
I'll love you forever,
I'll like you for always,
As long as I'm living
my baby you'll be.

The little boy grew. He grew and he grew and he grew. He grew until he was nine years old... and [then] a teenager... But at night time...
I'll love you forever,
I'll like you for always,
As long as I'm living
my baby you'll be.

That teenager grew. He grew and he grew and he grew. He grew until he was a grown-up man. He left home and got a house across town. But sometimes on dark nights the mother got into her car and drove across town.  If all the lights in her son's house were out, she opened his bedroom window, crawled across the floor, and looked up over the side of his bed. If that great big man was really asleep she picked him up and rocked him back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. And while she rocked him she sang:
I'll love you forever,
I'll like you for always,
As long as I'm living
my baby you'll be.
from Robert  Munsch's
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I believe that it is a parent's prerogative to, perpetually, view their children as their babies, no matter what age those babies are.
As of this coming Friday, Patti and I will have two adult sons: they were ages four and two when we first moved to Leduc.  Where has the time gone?
As long as their living,
our babies they'll be.
Even so, it is potentially a wonderful experience for a parent-child relationship to evolve into a positive adult-to-adult connection - rarely do these relationships completely discard the parent-child traditional hierarchy, but (at its healthiest) these relationships do evolve.  Usually that involves a change of expectations on both the part of the child and the parent: the parent releases decision-making control to their child (especially the decisions to make mistakes) - and the child relieves the parent of the responsibility of solving all of their problems.
I can attest (from both sides of that coin) that this transition does not always happen smoothly.  And it does not have to be a linear change.  More often than not, we fluctuate between the extremes of a hands off but loving attitude (tough love) to a let me make everything better one (ooky-pooky).
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That struggle is illustrated in Ron Howard's 1989 movie, Parenthood.  The family patriarch, played by Jason Robards, feels obligated to do what he can to protect his wild-child youngest son (played by Tom Hulch [hools as in book]).  Frank comes up with a plan to pay off Larry's gambling debts over time in exchange for Larry coming to work with his dad at the family plumbing supply store, only to have to accept his son's wrinkle in the "Frank Buchman" plan - Larry just got a call from a friend and will be leaving for Chili for a new business opportunity.  If that doesn't work out, Larry will consider a career in plumbing supplies.  In the meantime Frank can help him out with a little cash for the road and letting Larry's young son stay with his grandparents.  Don't worry about it, the father says - walking that edge between trying to solve the problem and letting the adult-child make his own decisions.
//
All kidding aside, I have very heartfelt empathy for those who are caught in the ebb and flow of what kind of a relationship adult children have with their parents and visa versa.
When things get difficult, sometimes, all we are left with are less-than-desirable choices: dilemmas in the worst sense of the word.  And no matter what we choose, someone will argue that we are doing the wrong thing.
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Family relationships are hard.
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According to the synoptic gospels, immediately after his baptism, thirty year old Jesus spent several weeks alone in the wilderness struggling with the focus of the next phase of his life. 
From what the gospels imply, Jesus had a fairly normal and predictable life up to that point: he stayed in his hometown (Nazareth) and followed in his father's footsteps and became a carpenter.
Now, in mid-life, Jesus was setting out on a new path.
He had moved from his small farming village to the major fishing port city of Capernaum.
When he came out of the wilderness, Jesus was 'deeply inspired' (filled with the power of the Holy Spirit the author of Luke writes) and traveled around various towns and villages from his new home base by the Sea of Galilee, teaching in various local synagogues.  Reports were that Jesus and his message were well received.  He started to develop a bit of a reputation as a wise and inspiring teacher healer.
If you were here last Sunday, you may recall that Jesus' travels brought him back to the synagogue in his hometown of Nazareth where he (along with others, as was the custom) offered reflections on a text from Isaiah.  The text in question  read:
The spirit of the Lord is upon me because God has anointed me
to preach good news to the poor.
God has sent me to proclaim release to the captives
and recovery of sight to the blind;
to set at liberty those
who are oppress`ed
and to proclaim the acceptable
year of the Lord.
Jesus' reflection:  "Today, this scripture had been fulfilled in your hearing."
The people in the synagogue that Saturday were impressed with Jesus articulate and gracious words: All spoke well of him and were amased, the text reports.
The word "amased" seems to the right word here.  We could read surprised in that sentence based on what Luke reports next.
Wow!  Who would have expected such wisdom from Joseph' son?
Many of these people knew this same Jesus when he was in diapers.  They were neighbours of Joseph and Mary; they knew the rest of Jesus' family in Nazareth. [Mark's version of this story mentions Jesus' sisters and brothers.]  They had heard of what Jesus had been doing and saying in the other towns, but now they were hearing it for themselves.
This new Jesus was not what they had come to expect.
//
Luke is less direct than Mark and Matthew, but clearly, the hometown crowd questioned whether Jesus could live up to the rumours from the other communities.  They wanted to see for themselves: do 'here' the things we heard you did in Capernaum.
But Jesus was not a travelling minstrel, putting on shows for people's amusement.  He was ministering - proclaiming a fresh vision of the nearness of the Realm of God. 
It was a misunderstanding of what he was now about to assume that he would be pulling rabbits of of his hat on request.
The crowds reaction seems extreme, but - according to the text - at least a few of them became quite angry at Jesus' lack of respect for his home town's desires (filled with rage) and ran him out of town.
An group of them even followed him up the hill on the edge of town.  The story goes that they might even have wanted to hurl him off the cliff
As I said, that seems to be an exaggerated reaction.  If it was the case, fortunately cooler heads prevailed and Jesus was allowed to go on his way.
It seems that Jesus was right when he said: no prophet is accepted in his hometown.  A saying that is referenced in all four of the biblical gospels by they way.
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If you are familiar with some of my past sermons, you will know that I like to focus on not only the literal details of scripture stories but also the messages they can relay beyond the literal - at the parable or metaphoric level.
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This week, as I was reading some background materials on today's readings from the Seasons of the Spirit resource from Wood Lake Books, I liked how they pointed out that Jesus found himself (literally) at the edge of his hometown.
Figuratively, that can remind us of a risky, but profoundly impactful, ministry that is lived out on the edge.
Jesus could have played it safe and became the showman that the fickle crowds demanded to save him from the risks of being on the edge.
But Jesus was prepared for this conflict; he had wrestled with this temptation while he was in the wilderness after his baptism.
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Jesus must have been disappointed that people in his hometown couldn't reconcile the old reputation of his childhood in Nazareth (and his first career as a second generation carpenter) with the emerging reputation of his new midlife career as a travelling teacher-prophet who had moved to the bigger city.
Jesus had to accept that - for the time being at least - they were too close to appreciate the significance of what he was proclaiming - we might use the metaphor that they couldn't see the forest for the trees - they were "too close to see".
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The new direction of Jesus' life and ministry was not going to be held back by those who wanted to hold on to his past.
Like young Jeremiah, Jesus knew that God does not hold us back.  Yes, we are known for who we were, but that does not limit who we can become.
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I think a message for us today (from what we have read in Jeremiah and Luke) is that we are encouraged to not be so quick to think we know everything about our current situation.
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Our accumulated knowledge and understandings not withstanding, there is more to discover - more to learn.  We are continuously maturing as individuals in this life and in our relationship with God.
Our call to be people of faith is constantly evolving. 
Each day, there are new opportunities to become the people our God would have us be.
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That will, no doubt, bring us times of (both) comfort and challenge.  Like it was for Jesus, for us, faithful living involves being on the edge.
There is great value for us to remain mindful of the wider perspective - the bigger picture of God's compassion for us and all creation.
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Let us desire to know more.
Let us view mystery not as something to be feared, but as a wonder be embraced.
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When we find ourselves on those difficult ledges and edges, let us trust that God can guide us toward the new paths - away from the difficulties of the past.
Let's give each other room to grow.  And let's find ways to walk the paths of life and faith together.
We are not alone.
Thanks be to God.
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Let us pray:
God, we find you with ones we did not expect. You do what we would not have chosen. Move our lives to join you on the edge, where holy love stretches out with grace.
Amen.

#161MV “I Have Called You By your Name”

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