Date: Easter Sunday 2020 Zoom Reflection Scripture: Mark 16:1-8, 9-20 Pastor: Rev. Kim P. Wells
This version of the Easter story ends in fear. The women flee. They are shocked. They have no idea what to make of this. They are in the middle of it and it is unprecedented. They cannot make meaning from this.
Yet. But in our Bibles there is more to the story. After time passed, as people reflected and discussed, a short ending was added to the gospel of Mark.
Read Mark 16:9. The shorter ending.
So, we are told that the message was shared. But we are only given a general conclusion. Broad strokes.
As more time went on, and there was more reflection and discussion, new circumstances were unfolding, as people carried on with their lives in new ways, they began to see something more emerging, so they found new words to convey their experience.
We live by the stories we tell. So the original story that has come down to us from the Gospel of Mark was given a longer ending. It was completed. As we have it today.
Read Mark 9-20.
Sometimes when you are in the midst of something it is hard to see what the something is. It is confusing to make sense of it. You can’t pull back to get a better perspective or to see more clearly because you are in the middle. So you can’t take in the whole situation. Even many years after historical events, historians and scholars still find new meaning and understandings of things that happened long ago.
So, we are in the midst of this coronavirus pandemic. We can’t see the whole picture. The story is still unfolding. We haven’t gotten to the end of the season let alone the series as a whole. We haven’t read the epilogue. We don’t know what the outcomes will be. There may be many endings added to this story.
But there are some things we know.
The date for Easter is set according to the phases of the moon. Easter is the first Sunday after the first full moon after the vernal equinox. Yes, I know, it almost sounds like astrology! But the date for Easter is set according to the moon. And what a moon it was this week. We ogled the gorgeous, HUGE pink super moon. I got up in the middle of the night and thought someone had left a light on somewhere in the house, it was so bright inside. I looked around. No lights on. It was all of the light coming in the windows from that amazing moon!
The moon is reflecting its glorious light. Birds are astir building nests and hatching eggs. Plants are coming back to activity. Pollen fills the air. Butterflies are emerging from cocoons. In the pictures that people from the congregation sent in to show what they have been seeing and doing during this time of shelter-in-place, many of you sent in pictures of nature – glorious and thriving. Life flourishing in its many forms – plant and animal.
Scientist tell us that since the decrease in human activity due to the coronavirus, the air is cleaner and the water is clearer. I think of the words to the hymn based on the Canticle of the Sun St. Francis of Assisi, “Your flowing waters, crystal clear, make melodies for you to hear.”
While humans are struggling and our activities are restricted, nature is thriving in glory!
So, we remember the words from the book of Job: “But ask the animals, and they will teach you; the birds of the air, and they will tell you; ask the plants of the earth, and they will teach you; and the fish of the sea will declare to you.”
Easter is in the spring so that we will be stirred by the glories of nature. This is even more conspicuous in more temperate climes where new life emerges from the dormancy of the cold of winter. But even here, in our ever warming tropical climate, we will see the natural world coming alive, and we witness again that life is stronger death.
The power of the love of God cannot be extinguished. It cannot be contained. It cannot be subdued. The image of Jesus released from the tomb, out of the ultimate lockdown, expresses that love prevails. New live, thriving, vibrant, transformational is loose in the world. The energy, passion and power of love is stronger than death.
For those early followers of Jesus, life was never the same after Easter. And we tell their story each year to remind ourselves that our lives, too, have been transformed. We, too, live with in a new world – a world rooted in love. A world of community, interdependence, and mutuality. A world in which life in all its forms is treated with reverence and respect. A world in which death does not have the last word. Even the thousands upon thousands of deaths left in the wake pandemic. Even the COVID-019 cannot stop the transforming power of love. Some even suggest this crisis is moving us toward a more compassionate, just world. Yes, in the designs of God good can come even from the most devastating tragedy. Love truly does win.
So, How the Grinch Stole Christmas has always been one of my favorite Christmas stories. As I have been imaging how to celebrate Easter on lockdown, I have been thinking about the story of the Grinch. There is that scene toward the end of the book when the Grinch, who has removed every material vestige of Christmas from Whoville and returned to his mountain with the spoils hears, what does he hear? Singing? So, here’s my Easter version of a part of Dr. Seuss’s beloved classic:
The virus hasn’t stopped Easter from Coming! It came! Somehow or other, it came just the same! It came without baskets! It came without grass! It came without bunnies, lilies, or brass! Yes, Easter, we know, doesn’t come from a store Yes, Easter, we know, means a whole lot more!
Date: Easter Sunday April 12, 2020 Scripture: Matthew 28:1-10, 16-20 Pastor: Rev. Kim P. Wells
In the story of the burial of Jesus we are told of a stone closing the tomb. The image is of a permanently shut resting place. We are not told of a tomb with a door or a gate. We are told of something that is sealed shut with a large rock. Jesus is closed off. Locked in.
In the stories of the resurrection, we hear of the stone being moved, rolled away. The Gospel of Matthew tells of an earthquake that makes this happen. In any case, we are told that the stone is moved, the grave is open. The obstacle to accessing Jesus has been removed.
And we are told that the tomb is empty. Jesus is not there. He is no longer confined. He is not longer captive. He is not held back.
Jesus, his love and his power are present in the world. Active. Free. No restrictions. No lockdown. Divine Love is loose in the world!
Nothing can contain or confine the power of God’s Love. So, even though we are restricted by shelter-in-place, and safer-at-home, on lockdown, love can find us Love comes to us. And that love sets us free.
When the disciples and the women encounter Jesus after the crucifixion, he tells them to spread the world. To share the love. To be part of unleashing Divine Lov on the whole world. Everywhere. No limits or restrictions. We are the evidence of the effectiveness of their witness.
So this Easter, open yourself to receiving the Love. Let yourself be renewed by the power of Divine Love that is stronger than death. Breathe in that love and that peace that is loose and free in the world.
And know that you are needed to share that love with others. Find someone who needs encouragement and offer it. See if someone needs help and offer your assistance. Know of someone who is lonely? Contact them. Consider how to show support for essential workers, and healthcare workers who are extremely stressed. Look for ways to be in solidarity with those who are financially stretched by this pandemic.
Maybe you feel like you are just too down yourself. Think of someone in your situation and reach out. Maybe you feel heartbroken for all the lives lost and families grieving. Offer an expression of comfort to someone in that situation even if it is someone you don’t personally know.
Wherever we are in body or spirit, we can be part of spreading the love that has been loosed in the world through Jesus.
Yes, in these days of lockdown, how we long to be free! Not just free to move around and. interact, but to be free of injustice, free of economic scarcity, free of greed, free of disparity and corruption, free of misallocated resources, free of nationalistic posturing and partisan blaming.
Easter reminds us that the tomb is open. The way is clear. We have been invited out into a different world. A world where love reigns. Unleashed in the world. Drawing us into new life. And no power can stop it. We have but to come out and live fully and freely the way of heaven here on this earth.
We have seen much in these corona days. We have had time to look, to listen, to read, to learn, to reflect.
William Wilberforce, a politician and abolitionist of the 19th century challenges us: “You may choose to look the other way but you can never say again that you did not know.” Amen.
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Date: March 8, 2020 Scripture Lessons: Exodus 17:1-7 and John 4:5-42 Sermon: The Ripple Effect Pastor: Rev. Kim P. Wells
This past week our daughter, Angela, and her husband, Andy, and our grandchild, Soren, came to visit from the Boston area. While they were here, Angela and Andy went to the Strawberry Festival in Plant City. Now Andy is very political and has a master’s degree in public policy so he tends to make his views known. On this trip he brought a Warren for President hoodie and a Support Planned Parenthood t-shirt. As they were getting ready to go to the Strawberry Festival, Angela specifically instructed Andy not to wear anything from his political wardrobe. She didn’t want it to cause problems at the Strawberry Festival. And, as it turns out, there was quite a bit of open support for the current president at the Festival from flags at booths to stickers on food trucks. From Angela’s perspective, they were going into enemy territory and she did not want to have to engage with the enemy she simply wanted to eat strawberry shortcake and go on the rides in peace.
In the story we heard this morning about the encounter between Jesus and the woman at the well, Jesus is in enemy territory. The Jews and the Samaritans were bitter enemies as often happens with different branches of a religious movement that stem from the same stalk. The religion of the Jews and the religion of the Samaritans had roots in ancient Hebrew culture but they divided in a controversy over the correct location for the cultic center of their religion. The Samaritans thought that Mount Gerizim was the proper center for cultic worship. The Jews thought that Jerusalem was the correct location hence the comment from the woman at the well: “Our ancestors worshiped on this mountain, but you say that the place where people must worship is in Jerusalem.” [4:20] This dispute had persisted for hundreds of years.
So, as the story starts, Jesus is in Samaria, enemy territory, which incidentally had a very arid climate. And it is the middle of the day and he is thirsty and has no way to draw water from a well. Jews and Samaritans don’t intermingle. Also, a male is not to talk to a female in public. Period. And a rabbi certainly is not to be speaking openly with someone with a questionable lifestyle. As we hear in the story, Jesus, a Jewish rabbi, encounters a Samaritan woman at the well. And she has had 5 husbands and is currently living with yet another man. So, no conversation, of any kind, should ever be taking place between these two people – as the disciples point out when they arrive on the scene: “Why are you speaking with her?” [4:27]
Jesus is definitely making waves. He is troubling the water. Talking with a Samaritan. And a woman, no less. And a sinful woman at that. He is defying the religious, racial, gender, and social dictates of his context. This conversation should not be taking place. But instead of casting this conversation as an interaction between a Jewish man and a Samaritan woman, Jesus casts this conversation as an exchange between between two human beings who have something to give each other. She can give him water from the well. He can give her living water. Reality is turned upside down. Social dictates are eroded.
Jesus offers the woman living water; water that is moving, bubbling, fresh, flowing, springing forth with new life. It is not stagnant water that cannot support life, that has no refreshing power. Jesus offers this nameless woman a new reality and she accepts it. Whatever it is that honors her full humanity, she is ready to take it.
And then we see how life giving and life changing this living water from Jesus really is. You see, this woman is at the well at noon. That is not the time to be coming for water. Women go to the well in the early morning when the temperature is cool. And they go together because it is a time of important social connection and community. But this woman, with her five plus husbands, is not welcome in the community of women that go to the well together each day, and share their joys and concerns, and laugh and cry together. No, she is not welcome in the company of women. She is ostracized, vilified, shunned. So she goes to the well alone, at noon, in the heat of the day, to avoid any unpleasant encounters. She lives in enemy territory herself even though she is a Samaritan living in Samaria. But this living water she has received from Jesus is life giving water. It is rippling, running through her. And she is so stunned by its power, that she rushes back to the village. Leaves her water jug behind. And she pours out her experience to the people of the village. She shares her life changing encounter with the villagers, her enemies, because she does not want them to miss out on this living water, this spiritual life force. She ventures into the enemy territory of her own town to save her enemies.
The living water of Jesus is having a ripple effect beyond Jesus to the woman and beyond the woman to the town. And on from there. It is still rippling in us today as we share this story. When we experience the love of Jesus and seek to follow in his way, we find that he erodes our prejudices, he washes away our gender bias, he carries off our religious exclusivism, he cleanses us of our nationalistic narrow mindedness. Jesus washes us clean of everything that sullies our pure humanity. Everything that obstructs community. His living water cleanses us of hatred and arrogance. We love even our enemies and, like the woman at the well, seek their highest good.
The course of the living water of Jesus is a path of forgiveness, a way that washes away barricades and walls, and creates bridges and connections. Once we have received it, once it has refreshed us and washed away all that obstructs our being in the new reality of Divine Love, we are born anew awash with living water like amniotic fluid. A new beginning.
The authenticity and the sincerity of the Samaritan woman’s spiritual experience can be seen in the fruit that is borne. She is not just happy to be forgiven and accepted and set straight in her theological thinking. She is not just grateful for what Jesus has done for her. Because with Jesus, if it is real, it means that it is not just for you, it is for you to share. And share she does. She goes to her hostile, mean spirited village, and offers them the life-giving experience she has received. She shares. She offers to slake their thirst once and for all.
That is the way of Jesus. If you do not see evidence of the ripples of the way of Jesus, of his crossing divides and dismantling barriers and affirming our common humanity with compassion and grace, then its probably not the living water of Jesus Christ. His living water is not just for us, it is for everyone, and it always ripples away from us to others.
A couple of months ago, we went to a political rally in Straub Park here in St. Petersburg. It was a demonstration in support of the impeachment process. Now I know we don’t typically discuss politics to this degree in church but regardless of your party affiliation or your voting preferences there is simply no way to square the beliefs and behavior of the current president with the way of Jesus. So, we went to this rally and there were a couple of supporters of the president at the rally with signs and MAGA swag. As the rally was ending, I made it a point to go up and talk with them. I introduced myself. I shook hands with them. They asked if I supported the president. I said no. But I wanted to thank them for coming to the rally. I told them I believed that everyone should have free speech and should be free to express themselves. They deserved to be respected because they had a right to be there like everyone else. I said we all have to live here together in this country. We need to understand each other. I told them I respect their dignity and their right to self expression. They were surprised at how friendly I was.
I hope when they get the next email from the current administration telling them that “they” – the liberal progressive left – hate you, they will remember the woman from Straub Park who was so friendly.
As an aside, a demonstration supporter came up to me after I spoke with the Trumpers and asked if I supported the president. I made my views clear. He proceeded to yell at me for talking with them. I told him the same thing I told them, we all have to live here together in this country. We need to understand each other. And everyone should be treated with dignity and respect.
We have to let the living water of Jesus wash over us, well up in us, bubble forth from us, flow out around us. The world is in desperate need. Conditions are perilous. Life is threatened.
Living water is powerful. Rivers wear away stone. Cataracts carve the landscape. After the Japanese tsunami of 2011, currents carried personal belongings washed from Japanese homes over 5,000 miles to the west coast of North America. May the living water of Jesus ripple through us to transform the world. Amen.
A reasonable effort has been made to appropriately cite materials referenced in this sermon. For additional information, please contact Lakewood United Church of Christ.
Scripture Lesson: Matthew 4:1-11 Sermon: On Liberty and Slavery Pastor: Rev. Kim P. Wells
Fourteen hundred and ninety-two. Of course. We know what happened then. Columbus sailed the ocean blue. That is drilled into us in school. 1776. We all know that year. The birth of a nation. But what about 1619? Recently, there have been efforts to make sure that all of us are clear about 1619 and what happened in that year for it is a year that is as important to our identity and heritage as a people as 1492 and 1776.
What about 1619? I didn’t learn anything in school about that. The 1619 project of the New York Times is helping us all to learn that in 1619 the first African slaves arrived in the English mainland of North America. It is an important marker in our history as a nation.
Yes, we all learn about slavery. In elementary school I did a book report about Frederick Douglass entitled, “Agitate! Agitate! Agitate!” We learn about the plantations. We may read Uncle Tom’s Cabin. We watch “Gone With the Wind.” We read Toni Morrison’s Beloved and learn of a mother who felt it was more loving to kill her child that have the child grow up a slave. In more recent years we’ve seen “12 Years a Slave” and “Harriet.” But for all that exposure, for all the reading and the films I’ve seen, from the places I’ve visited including the National Lynching Memorial and Museum in Montgomery, Alabama, for all of the conversations I have had with people, I still don’t feel that I understand or comprehend slavery. Not intellectually. Not emotionally. And certainly not morally.
I can never pretend to empathize with the ravages of slavery upon the human psyche and all of the continuing aftershocks of slavery that are still being felt on the streets and in the stores and in the offices and on the playing fields even of our city here today.
My ancestors chose to come to these shores from Europe in the last century. They chose to seek new life here. One of my grandfathers chose to leave his country of origin, Italy, chose to leave his wife and children, and chose to come here to start a new life with a new wife and children. It was his choice. No one forced him. No one captured him. No one tied him down and put him on a boat and brought him here against his will. That leaves a heritage completely different from the legacy of slavery. I cannot pretend to understand what it feels like to be the descendent of slaves.
It is hard enough for me to try to comprehend the inheritance of whiteness. For slavery to thrive, the concept of whiteness had to constructed, invented, designed and instilled so that slavery could be maintained. That is baffling to me, as well. How could people, especially supposedly Christian people, create a social system that places a value on people based simply on skin tone? Something so random? Yet slavery and racism only “work” where the concept of whiteness is associated with superiority and every other skin tone with inferiority. There is nothing “natural” about the racial constructs of slavery and the reality that was constructed to imbed and maintain slavery in American society. Slavery is a social and economic construct. Devised and perpetuated by people. Slavery and its aftermath are the result of human choices.
This morning, we listened to the story of the temptation of Jesus in the wilderness. It is the classic story for the beginning of Lent, a liturgical season of soul searching and repentance. In the story we are told of Jesus going into the wilderness by himself for 40 days. Here he is not under the influence of society or the power structures of his day. He is free to look within. To search his soul. To give his heart fully and completely to God. In the wilderness, he can define himself in relationship to the transcendent and creation, and not in relation to the constructs of human society with its power arrangements and economic systems. Then he is tempted; as he will be when he returns from the wilderness. Jesus’ strength of resolve and identity are tested. Can he stay true to the reality of the commonwealth of God, the dream of God, despite other competing visions and voices? Does he have the capacity to chose the way of God/Love even when confronted with other choices that appear morally good or just simply benign? Can he stay aligned with God regardless? The story tells us that Jesus stays true, centered, and grounded, in his devotion to God and God alone.
In this story we see Jesus free himself from the constructs and constrictions of religion, ethnicity, gender, class, tribal identity, and status that are in conflict with universal unconditional Divine Love.
This desert testing conveys a grueling confrontation. Yet a necessary one. For to be true to our faith is a difficult challenge.
In his book, Meditations on the Sand, Alessandro Pronzato reflects, “If you therefore go to the desert to be rid of all the dreadful people and all the awful problems in your life, you will be wasting your time. You should go to the desert for a total confrontation with yourself. For one goes to the desert to see more and to see better. One goes to the desert especially to take a closer look at the things and people one would rather not see, to face situations one would rather avoid, to answer questions one would rather forget.”
The season of Lent is a time for this kind of honesty and self assessment. It is a time to test our words against our deeds. It is time to examine ourselves to see if our hopes and dreams are aligned with the intentions of God for the good of all. And we will not like everything that we see. That is why Lent is a season of forgiveness, atonement, and reconciliation. Our faith gives us a way through the morass that we may find as we examine ourselves and our relationships with others, individually and socially. It gives us a path to freedom.
What Jesus ultimately finds in the wilderness is his freedom. The story of temptation and testing shows us that he remains free. He is not controlled by the society or the values or even the religion of his day. He is not seduced by popularity, power, or comfort. He limits the control of other influences upon his life. He is choosing for himself. He is free.
This is the highest goal of the human journey. Freedom. Our faith is about freedom. We believe that the truth will set us free; that we have freedom of choice.
I’m not going to say that we are all enslaved because slavery was about people being forced into a situation where against their will.
As Christians, we believe that we are tethered to the reality we are in by choice. We have choices about what we accept and whether or not we accept the reality we are being given. We have the choice whether or not to accept the construct of whiteness. We have the choice whether or not to accept racism in our community and country. We have inherited the ravages of slavery but we have the power over what we do with that inheritance. We do not have to accept social constructs that define things by race and we do not have to accept the perpetuation of the legacy of slavery and its assault on human dignity and human value. We have choices about how we reckon with the legacy of slavery. Or don’t. We do not have to accept the social arrangements or economic arrangements that continue oppression. We have the freedom to embrace an antiracist reality. We can accept the reality of reparations. We can accept the reality that Jesus shows us of universal, unconditional Love. Consciously or unconsciously, we are making choices. So if the racism persists, this has to do with our choices as individuals and as a community; as people of European descent and people of African descent; as Americans. We are choosing.
Our faith liberates us from captivity. In the story of Adam and Eve, they eat the apple and their eyes are opened. They have choices. They have free will. We have choices. Our faith is about what we do with our choices and our free will. We will make mistakes. We will cause harm. So our faith also has a path for repentance, for reconciliation, for restitution and for new life, new birth, and new creation.
We have the freedom and the opportunity to create our reality. In fact, we have the obligation to create our reality. Others are trying to create our reality for us all the time. But finally each of us has choices to make. These choices are not necessarily easy, but we can be at our fullest, our freest, and our most human when we take responsibility for our choices. Like Jesus, we have the choice to align ourselves with the God of Love and that God alone. That is when we are truly free. Former slave, George Moses Horton, celebrates that freedom in his poetry-
Oh, Liberty! Thou golden prize, So often sought by blood – We crave they sacred sun to rise, The gift of nature’s God! Amen.
Following the sermon, the choir sang the anthem, “On Liberty and Slavery,” composed by music director Hilton Kean Jones, based on the words of the poem by George Moses Horton. It was the premier performance of the anthem.
The words of the poem are included here and a biography of Horton.
A reasonable effort has been made to appropriately cite materials referenced in this sermon. For additional information, please contact Lakewood United Church of Christ.
George Moses Horton 1798–1883
Born a slave on William Horton’s tobacco plantation, George Moses Horton taught himself to read. Around 1815 he began composing poems in his head, saying them aloud and “selling” them to an increasingly large crowd of buyers at the weekly Chapel Hill farmers market. Students at the nearby University of North Carolina bought his love poems and lent him books. As his fame spread, he gained the attention of Caroline Lee Whiting Hentz, a novelist and professor’s wife who transcribed his poetry and helped publish it in her hometown newspaper. With her assistance, Horton published his first collection of poetry, The Hope of Liberty (1829), becoming the first African American man to publish a book in the South—and one of the first to publicly protest his slavery in poetry.
Horton hoped to earn enough money from the publication of his book to buy his freedom, but his attempts were denied despite significant support from members of the public, including the governor.
He learned to write in 1832. In the early 1830s, with a weekly income from his poems of at least $3, Horton arranged to purchase his time from his owner, and became a full-time poet, handyman, and servant at the university. He continued to buy his own time for more than 30 years while publishing a second collection of poetry, The Poetical Works (1845), and continuing to appeal for his freedom.
After the Civil War, Horton traveled with the 9th Michigan Cavalry Volunteers throughout North Carolina. During those travels, he composed the poems that make up his third collection, Naked Genius (1865), published in Raleigh. After 68 years as a slave, he settled in Philadelphia for at least 17 years of freedom before his death, circa 1883.
His legacy is celebrated by the residents of Chatham County: he is the namesake of Horton Middle School, June 28 was declared George Moses Horton Day in 1978, and in 1997 he was declared the Historic Poet Laureate of Chatham County. Horton’s poetry is featured in the Norton Anthology of African American Literature, and in 1996 he was inducted into the North Carolina Literary Hall of Fame. A selection of his poems appears in The Black Bard of North Carolina: George Moses Horton and His Poetry (1997, ed. Joan R. Sherman).
Horton’s poetry displays a keen ear for rhythm and rhyme and a circumspect understanding of human nature. His poetry explores faith, love, and slavery while celebrating the rural beauty of Chatham County, home of the plantation on which Horton spent much of his life.
A historic marker stands near where Horton’s plantation was located.
Scripture Lesson: Matthew 5:13-16 Sermon: Living in the Light Pastor: Rev. Kim P. Wells
The Last Englishmen: Love, War, and the End of Empire by Deborah Baker is an historical account of the early British efforts to summit Mount Everest set in the context of colonial India and World War 2. Following an unsuccessful attempt on Everest in 1933, a reconnaissance expedition is sent in 1934. This small team was to map more of the area and take photographs so that a route could be identified for another attempt on Everest the next year. Along the way, the small entourage stops in a village in Tibet but they are turned back and not given permission to continue. They must head to another route to continue their surveying and examination of the terrain. The head of the expedition asks the head of the village why they are not being permitted to pass through the region. The headman of the village gives this explanation:
“Western ways leave behind nothing but unhappiness,” the headman replied. “What will I do with the 200 rupees you have paid me for the use of my ponies? Where there is no surplus there is nothing to buy. You have only to open your eyes to see that in this country soil, crops, and people exist in a delicate balance. Money can’t replenish the fodder consumed by transiting yaks. Money will simply provide grounds for the headman in the next village to be jealous thus establishing the conditions for perpetual strife. This is the material and spiritual effect of an expedition passing through our lands. This is how unhappiness and suffering are introduced into our lives.” [4 minutes and 45 seconds into the recorded book]
What a piercing ray of light and truth spoken to these Englishmen, so sure of themselves and of the importance of their mission. The Tibetan leader speaks his truth. Shares his insight. Tells his story. Reveals the reality of life for himself and those of his culture and community.
As we heard from the Sermon on the Mount this morning, Jesus is remembered for declaring that his followers are the light of the world. Not one of them but all of them are the light of the world. Not just Jesus who appeared aglow with light on the mountain top. And the verb used is present tense. They are the light of the world. We are not told that they will be the light of the world. At some future point. When they have proven themselves. Or when they have passed some kind of test. They will not become the light after they have been given a license. Or obtained a permit. Or made a donation. Or earned a diploma. No. There is no test or measurement or criteria. The followers of Jesus are, simply, the light of the world. This is a way of saying that God is present. It is an acknowledgment of Divinity within. It is a way of expressing the power of each and every person for good, for truth, and for healing.
Light is a functional metaphor. Light shines. It does something. Has an impact. Light is visible, public. It is not to be hidden under a bushel. Following Jesus is not just a personal, private matter. This image of light has power. Light makes rats scurry and it draws moths.
We don’t know that we will have to face in this life. But we know that we can trust the light to show us the way, to lead us, to give us strength because, fundamentally, light is life giving. It is like the light necessary for a plant to grow. Light is healing. Light is warmth. Light reveals beauty. Light is energy. Light is vision. We need light to live fully, knowing the deep experience of our humanness.
But it’s easy to resist this metaphor of light. It is easy to be reluctant to accept this teaching. If we have this power, then we must be responsible for what we are doing with it. The light within must be allowed to shine. Our story, our reality, our experience, our perspective is to be valued and shared.
And here is the real problem with light. We may not like what we see. We may not like what it shows. It may be horrific. Scary. We may not want to see what is exposed by the light.
Maybe we don’t want to see that we are in an abusive relationship. Or that someone we love is in such a relationship. Maybe we don’t want to see the ramifications of something we have done which is causing harm to others. Easier not to know the story of the farmworkers and just eat those tomatoes they have picked. Who wants to see the truth of global warming and the devastation and destruction that it is already causing on a daily basis? Who wants to know about the continuing legacy of slavery that plagues our society today?
To think that we have some kind of light that we are compelled to shine, it can justseem like too much responsibility, too heavy a burden, too overwhelming.
Thomas Merton, mystic of the 20th century, reminds us that we are not alone. He writes: “I have the immense joy of being…a member of a race in which God Himself became incarnate. As if the sorrows and stupidities of the human condition could overwhelm me, now that I realize what we all are. And if only everybody could realize this! But it cannot be explained. There is no way of telling people that they are all walking around shining like the sun.”
In the verse we heard this morning, “You are the light of the world,” the word ‘you’ is plural. It’s not just you, or you, or you, or me. It is all of us. Each of us has light that is needed to overcome the darkness of our spirits and the darkness in. the world.
We are all light. The light of the world. Every one of us contributing like an array of solar panels. Enabling vision and insight. Driving out fear.
And the light is needed especially when it is darkest. That is when the light shines most brightly: When people are being mean and hurtful, a beam of kindness and understanding. When people are hostile and at odds, even engaged in violence and war, a ray of understanding and peace. When things are swirling in a confused muddle of corruption, lies, and betrayal, a beacon of right, of ethical grounding, of moral good. When selfishness and greed seem to be winning the day, there is a stream of generosity, justice, and compassion.
No matter the extremity of the darkness, there is light, and it shines from others, it shines from us. We have not chosen to bear the light. It has been given. Like the sun. To light of the world. Amen.
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