Easter
4 Year C
21
April 2013
Sunday
after immense tragedy
I must admit
that this morning I am exceptionally tired—and it’s not because I went to
Thunder last night and didn’t get home until midnight. And it’s not because I got up at an hour even
early for me to write this sermon. I had
to get up; I didn’t have much of a sermon yet.
It wasn’t that I hadn’t tried for hours but because I didn’t know what
to say—I seem to only have questions—and no answers. 0f the many, many
questions the ones that are continually reverberating in my mind are “Why God?”
and “When will all these tragedies and catastrophes end?”, and “how in the
world do I as a Christian respond?”
This week these
questions have flown through my mind at lightening speed—as I’m sure they’ve
flown through many people’s minds. Try
as I might, I couldn’t find a place to start. If I try to begin to answer the question “why
God” with there are evil broken people in this broken world and that is part of
the reason the devastation in Boston and the reason the ricin letters were
mailed, I am quickly pulled up short.
Perhaps that is part of the answer for those two horrific events, but
what about the fires in West, Texas and the devastating earthquake in China? Who do I blame for those? How do I explain those away? How do I give those explanations; and I need
explanations. Explanations help to
control—as a people many of us believe that if we can explain how and why
something happens we can control it. I
like control; I like stability, predictability, color coded charts and
calendars, and the only surprises I like are jewelry, happy rainbows and
unicorns—in that order.
Today’s psalm,
the much loved psalm 23, itself denies the reality of the world and the control
I want. It does not say “if I walk
through the valley of the shadow of death” but rather “even though” or in some
translations “when I walk.” It does not
deny, it in fact affirms that there will be darkness and valleys in our
lives. Some of these valleys we will walk
through alone as—the death of loved ones, medical diagnosis we don’t want to
hear, financial troubles, broken relationship; and some we will feel as
communities local, national, and international—events like those that happened
this week. It does not deny these
realities but it unquestionably states I will not be afraid, I will fear no
evil for you are with me.
This psalm
tells us how we are to believe, how we are to respond. We are to respond without fear and with trust
that God is with us. This week we are
forced to stare deeply into our souls and ask the questions. Do we
really believe those things we profess week after week? Do we trust in the goodness and mercy of God,
in the faithfulness and presence of God?
Last week many of us were here and were witnesses to a baptism and we
heard parents and godparents answer the question, “Do you put your whole trust
in his grace and love?” Perhaps you’ve
answered that question for yourself or for your children or god children. Today and in the days ahead we have the
opportunity to live, to speak, and to act into the answer “I do.”
In the last few
days, we have witnessed many examples of people who have lived into this
profession—we have witnessed examples of people who refused to allow fear to be
their guiding force. We saw that fear
was not the only force at work in the world—we saw that love, courage,
compassion, commitment, discipline, sacrifice, faith, and hope are also very
much alive, present and active in the world.
The presence of God, the Spirit of God moved through and with
people. I pray that we the people
gathered here today and people throughout the world can continue to allow these
forces, forces given by God, to be powerfully seen and felt. In the days and weeks ahead it will be tempting
to allow fear to reign. Some in the
world will try to capitalize on our fears.
And there may be movements whose purpose is to increase our fear to
levels that have no place to go except in the form of anger--anger which can
lead to vengeance, more violence, more hatred, more victims, and more
hurt.
The psalm today
acknowledges darkness and evil, and it even acknowledges that we will have
enemies. But the psalm also defeats these in its profession of the goodness and
mercy of God, in the care and nurturing of God; the psalm offers us another
worldview—a view of the world where fear and vengeance are not the only forces—they
are minimal forces,
In our church we sometimes hear the
phrase lex orandi lex credendi—the law of prayer is the law of belief. In essence, if I pray it enough, say it
enough, I will believe it. As we pray
psalm 23 today and in the days to come, I pray that the prayer leads to and solidifies
our belief and that belief drives our behavior.
Prayer does something else—I was
reading Thomas Merton this week and he says this about prayer/contemplation,
“Contemplation is also the response to a call:
a call from Him Who has no voice, and yet Who speaks in everything that
is, and Who, most of all, speaks in the depths of our own being: for we ourselves are words of His.” (New
Seeds of Contemplation p.3) I pray that
we are refreshed and nourished today and in the days to come through our
worship, through the Eucharist, through our community and through our prayer so
that we can live and be the words of God and the presence of God in these dark
days. I pray that we can be the light
that shines forth.
Our questions won’t stop; many of
our questions are unanswerable. A friend
of mine said this about why we go to church, “we don’t come to church because
we expect answers, but we come to ask the unanswerable questions and to ask
them with other people.” I add to that,
and we come to church to be with others who believe in the power and goodness
of God; we come to be reminded and to remind others. Yes many of our questions will remain
unanswered, but the question “Where was God, where is God in this world?” we
can help answer. Our words and actions
can say, God is right here dwelling in you and in me; God is in Boston, in
Texas, and in China dwelling in and with many others. We are a community of faith, a communion of saints
past, present, and future.
Thank you, thank you for being here
for and with me today—today being here with you reminds me.