|
Return |
|
Presiding Bishop's Pentecost Sermon at All Saints, Mobile, Alabama
|
|
Well, I don’t think we’re going to get to sing Dem bones, dem bones, dem dry Bones, O hear the word of the Lord. Though I think we should. Ezekiel was preaching to people lost in isolation and hopelessness, exiled from their native land, sure they would never see home again, and feeling that God had utterly abandoned them. That old spiritual is a sacramental way of speaking to that sense of hopelessness and abandonment. There are some around here who know about being washed out of house and home, downsized out of economic security, or even feeling abandoned by perceived changes in the church of their childhood. We are all liable to depression and turning inward when the world around us looks dark and grim and lonely. Those disciples in Dry bones, indeed. Dead sticks, strewn across the sandy field, with not a shred of life left; fossils whose DNA has all decayed. Not unlike the killing fields of Deliverance, too, in an economic situation like ours, with foreclosures rising along with the need for the kinds of feeding and serving ministries in which All Saints is engaged. Sometimes deliverance looks like letting go of the world’s definition of significant employment. I saw a fascinating newspaper article last weekend, an extract of Matthew Crawford’s book, Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry into the Value of Work.[i] He talks about his own journey, getting a Ph.D. in political philosophy, waiting around for a year before he got a job, and then being hired as the executive director of a policy organization in His report is also about listening deeply to his own internal groaning, waiting for deliverance. He might not use language like this, but it’s an example of listening well enough, and patiently enough, to finally discern where the spirit is leading. He let the spirit intercede, with sighs too deep for words – even though he’s pretty adept at reporting the experience in words, well after the fact. His stint at the policy outfit was dry bones. Now, those bones have flesh and sinew and new circulation. I’ve seen similar reports in the last few weeks about college students applying in droves for summer internships in agriculture – to work for as little as $25 a week, feeding lambs, tending crops, and peddling artisanal cheeses. Shortly after this service ends, we’re going to honor the work of many hands, a labor of love that has produced a dignified home for one family. Truly, this community has remembered the ancient charge to care for the sojourner, as well as the orphan and widow. And it hasn’t meant simply waiting for a house to fall from heaven. Dry sticks of lumber have made the bones of a new home, one that will be filled the love of this family and this community. Your tired bones have received the spirit and breathed new life into other dry bones – human and otherwise. There’s a fascinating bit in the gospel today that says the holy spirit those disciples are waiting for will prove the world wrong about sin and justice and judgment. Jesus insists that sin lies in turning away from the relationship with God that he’s shown them. Sin also lies in denying the goodness of the way God’s created us, in our uniqueness and our variety, and trying to be something we’re not. Justice or righteousness ultimately comes from God, and our own attempts at justice will never fully measure up to that divine vision. Judgment is pronounced on the idols of this world, like the ones that insist all people should be servants of the market or the state rather than each other. And finally, that when this spirit comes, the spirit will guide us into truth. The spirit won’t simply tell us what it is. Letting dry bones receive the moist breath of spirit, and new life in the process, takes time and willingness to receive. Those bones have to experience labor – and the labor of an easy yoke and a light burden does issue in new life. What will the bones of All Saints – healthy and vigorous now – look like in 100 years? Receiving breath and life of holy spirit, wherever it leads, will keep them covered in flesh and sinew. May you receive the groaning and labor as blessing. [i] Matthew B Crawford, Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry into the Value of Work, Penguin Press, 2009. New York Times Magazine 24 May 2009. |