Shalom
Mennonite Church
Sunday,
November 18, 2012
Worship
Theme: “Rejoice in the Lord Always”
Texts:
Philippians 4:4-9 and Luke 12:13-21
Eric
Massanari
“giving
thanks for all that is”
In
my parents' home there is a framed
print
of a famous Kathe Kollwitz drawing
of
a mother holding a small child.
For eighteen years it
hung on a wall
in my childhood home in Iowa City, Iowa.
For eighteen more years it hung on a wall
in
my parents' home in Detroit, MI.
And
now it hangs on a wall
in
their house in Lynden, WA.
At
some point my sister and I both
made
it known that we love this piece of art.
We
love it because it is beautiful
and
because it reminds us both of home.
A
running joke in our family centers around
which
one of us will get this piece of art
when
our parents die. Who will inherit it?
Will it go to their
first-born
(and no-doubt favorite) child?
Or, will it be given to
their youngest child
who probably doesn't
fully appreciate the
fine
quality of this piece of art.
One recent Christmas we all gathered
at my parents' home and I noticed
that the Kollwitz print was no longer there on the wall.
My sister informed me that Mom and Dadhad decided to give it to her and her family
for the wall of their new house.
I suspected something was up and
I soon found it hidden away under a bed.
It has all been in good fun.
I
will be fine if that print winds up
in
my sister's home (mostly fine, anyway).
That
print—a print of a parent lovingly
holding
a child—simply offers us a chance
to
hold lightly and with humor
some
things that are meaningful and important to us.
Through
our joking we acknowledge
that
our parents will not always be with us;
we remember that they
will one day die,
and so will we.
(And,
I should add that my folks,
take
part in this playful humor.)
Through
our joking we acknowledge
that
a very real risk of family life is that
we
can learn to value the wrong things.
Many
siblings and families really do
come
to argue and battle bitterly over who
will
get what portion of an inheritance
of land, money, stuff.
Through
our joking we are reminding
one
another that this is not what
we
wish to value in our family.
We
hope, as best we can, to value
all
that is of most value:
our relationships, and the love we share.
I
share that story because
I
believe that this is what Jesus points to
when
the fellow comes to him
and
asks him to help out in the dispute
he is having
with his brother over an inheritance.
In
those days, in that culture,
this
would have been considered
a
very normal request to bring
to
one of the Jewish teachers.
The
laws surrounding family inheritance
were
religious laws for the Jews,
and
they required a rabbi's help
for
interpretation and enforcement.
However,
it seems Jesus wants nothing to do
with
such a mediating role in this situation.
He
recognizes the greed motivating the man's request.
Jesus
becomes the man's advocate,
just
not in the way the fellow would like.
Jesus
offers him a teaching story,
a
parable about a wealthy
landowner
who has earned
much
through his prosperous farmland.
Just
like the Onceler in Dr. Suess'
own
parable, The Lorax, this
fellow
just “keeps on biggering
and
biggering, and biggering.”
He
can't get enough.
The
thought of sharing his surplus of grain
never
seems to cross his mind.
He
is thinking only of himself.
We
might notice that there is no other
character
in Jesus' parable.
The
successful fellow is all alone
in
the context of Jesus' story.
He
is left alone with his own prosperity,
his
own success, his own riches.
And
then comes the punchline:
What
a fool! What good is all of this wealth
if
this successful man dies this very night?
Who's
wealth is it then?
There
is an echo here of Jesus' words
earlier
in the gospel of Luke, in the ninth chapter:
What
good does it profit anyone
if
they gain the whole world
but
forfeit their lives? 9:25
Jesus
puts the words here in God's own mouth:
You
fool! This very night your life is being
demanded
of you. And the things you have
prepared,
whose will they be? So it is with
those
who store up treasure for themselves
but
are not rich toward God. (v.21)
I
wonder if this is the passage that
the
sponsors of a billboard near Wichita
were citing. Maybe you've seen the sign:
If
you die tonight....
Heaven?
or Hell?
This
parable is not about the afterlife.
Though
the story strikes a more negative tone,
as
some of the parables do,
this
is a story about how we live here and now.
To
use Jesus' own words,
this
is about learning what it means
to
be “rich towards God,” as we live,
and not just rich towards ourselves.
Jesus
invites the man
to
see that his greed has misled him.
It
has distracted him from
all
that is of greatest value in life.
And
in order to understand what
is
of greatest value, Jesus calls his attention
to a most basic fact
of life:
he
will die.
If
not tonight, then one day.
And
when that day comes
of
what value will be all
the
grain and all the wealth
that
he has stored up?
There
is deep wisdom in this parable
and
it is not wisdom that pertains
to
the afterlife, it is very much
about
this life we are all living
here
and now, today.
It
is the wisdom we are being
taught
in this autumn season
and
in every autumn season
on
the prairies as leaves fall,
and
living things move into
dormancy
while other beings die.
We
are taught that life
is
ever changing and that
one
of the most profound
changes
experienced in life is death.
You
and I will one day die.
Perhaps
this day.
Perhaps
not for days to come.
One
of the defining
characteristics
of life
in
all its forms is its impermanence.
And
in its impermanence
we
encounter life's supreme value and preciousness!
Life
comes to us as gift.
We
receive it as gift
and
we pass it on as gift.
Much
of what the world teaches
us
to value and hold in esteem
is
of little value at all
when
measured against
the
brief and precious measure
of
a human life.
When
we understand this,
and
realize the immeasurable value of
the
grace-filled gift we receive from God,
then
we are able to turn
toward
a life of deep
gratitude
and generosity.
When
we understand how
generous
and rich
God's
gifts are to us,
most
especially the gift of
mercy
and forgiveness
that
have been embodied in Christ,
then
we are able to be
generous
and rich toward God.
We
learn what it means to
rejoice
in the Lord always,
and
to again rejoice,
each
day we are given.
The
truth is that right now,
at
this moment,
this
is the one and only day that you have to live.
This
gift is given to you,
it
is not of your making.
What
will you treasure this day?
What
do you give thanks for this day?
What
do you rejoice in this day?
What
will you offer this day?
I invite you to carry these words
of Dag Hammarskjold into a time
of silent meditation:
Each
day the first day; each day a life.
Each
day we must hold out
the
chalice of our being to receive,
to
carry, and to give back.
It
must be held out empty...
No comments:
Post a Comment