Sunday, June 26, 2005

Embracing the Sword

A friend sent me a column this week by Rabbi Marc Gellman* in which he praised Billy Graham as a great preacher. I never gave Billy Graham much of a chance to impress me – I only watched one of his televised sermons and it didn’t do much for me. Reading what Gellman had to say, I realize that that maybe I need to go and give Rev. Graham another chance. But more than that, Gellman presents the best mission statement for preaching I’ve ever heard. He said that “preaching is essentially the presentation of a spiritual argument, which means that a sermon must be filled with ideas, not just feelings. To preach you must be smart, you much have faith and you must be able to simplify words without simplifying ideas. A preacher must then move beyond the logic of debate and into the world of personal peril and fear. A great sermon must be heard as if it were addressed only to you, the listener. It must first describe the storm in your life, and then it must offer you a compelling course to get through the storm and into quiet seas of love and hope. That hope must be simple and childlike but never childish. It must be a daring hope that inspires – not just deductively proves – the postulates of its argument, and that hope must be consonant with an ancient religion and not just a passing snapshot of what you decided to believe today. A sermon must be worldly without being trendy, humorous without being irreverent and certain without being arrogant. Understood this way, almost nobody can give a great sermon…”

Without these words, I’m not sure I felt up the task of a sermon on Jesus’ words claiming that he came to bring not peace but a sword. I usually preach about Jesus as the prince of peace but this passage has Jesus claiming a sword. I will not interpret this passage as justifying violence or warfare in Jesus’ name. Its truth must lie elsewhere. This takes my very best sermon writing cap.

First let’s look at a sword. As a righteous weapon they fill literature and history. I remember hearing that a samurai’s sword, drawn in battle could not be resheathed unless it had drawn blood. – not helpful here! It was not lost on the crusaders that a sword seen blade down takes the shape of a cross. The sword of a knight was a part of his identity. A ceremony of knighting uses a sword, touched to the shoulders and bowed head of the honoree. The three musketeers and d’Artagnan plied their swords in the service of honor and truth, like Zorro, the Scarlet Pimpernel and Robin Hood.

Excalibur is the prototype mythic sword – Excalibur is Arthur’s John the Baptist – it announces who he is. It then becomes a symbol of his hero’s journey. It has its own legend – it waits to be rediscovered from the mists of Avalon until a new time of Camelot comes.

Because swords are not the 21st century weapon of choice it’s easier to embrace them as a metaphor. At its most basic, a sword is something that cuts whether it is used as attack or defense. It will cut through things. It will cut off things. It will cut things in two. It takes courage to face a sword.

Jesus talks about the sword that will divide families. If you look carefully at the pattern it is setting the younger generation against the parents; a man against his father, daughter against mother and daughter-in-law against mother-in-law. This sword will cut the ties with what has been before. Here the parents’ generation can be heard as that place that was a spiritual and ideological home that one must leave in order to grow up. The sword is a sword that separates you from all that no longer serves you.

Some one who walks into an AA meeting and says, for the first time, “I’m an alcoholic” embraces the sword. The bonds of denial are severed – they are cut free and new life begins. This is true of all personal, physical addictions. It is also true of group addictions.

In his appreciation of Billy Graham, Rabbi Gellman illustrated this point. He said, “I also love that he had the courage to apologize for the poisons he drank as a kid. A few years ago, comments he had made to President Nixon in the Oval Office about the Jewish control of the media were made public and he immediately atoned. “I deeply regret comments I apparently made in an Oval Office conversation with President Nixon…They do not reflect my views, and I sincerely apologize for any offense caused by the remarks.”

The rabbi continues “Billy Graham is not God. He’s an 85-year-old white Southern guy who had to grow out of his past to understand the racism and anti-Semitism (homophobia and sexism, too) that was embedded in the culture of his youth…It takes courage for a master shepherd to tell his flock that he has learned something new about the sheep.”

The sword prunes us for new growth. Billy Graham bared his life to the sword and allowed old ideas and prejudices to be cut away. There’s always something that holds you back from the next step of your journey. As an 8 year old I loved the Disney Sleeping Beauty. The scene with the thorns growing around the castle terrified and thrilled me. The handsome prince had to wade into them with his sword as well as take on the dragon – he couldn’t get to the tower without struggle and cutting the branches that grabbed his clothes, trying to hold his back.

As Christians we embrace, albeit reluctantly, this sword that sets us adrift, no longer moored to the familiar. I think that’s what’s happening to our church right now. In England this week, the American and Canadian churches tried once again to explain that right now, we are cutting ourselves free from interpretations of scripture and structure that do not honor the image of God in each of us. A hundred years from now, when this brouhaha is behind us, something else will show itself as the brambles on the spiritual path. The need for a sword is a reminder that you always have something to cut away.

The good news is that once you allow the sword to do its work – you are free. Bishop Bruno’s embrace of the sword – in his case the surgeon’s scalpel – cut him free from the disease in his foot and he regained his life.

The sword that Jesus brings has many names. The sword of knowledge and learning frees you from ignorance or at the least, being uninteresting. The sword of community and relationship frees you from isolation. The sword of prayer frees you from desolation. The sword of compassion frees you from arrogance and apathy. The sword of forgiveness frees you from past anger and pain. And finally, love is the ultimate sword that frees you to dwell in God’s dream of a world restored to harmony, balance and peace.

* Excerpted from Words of Faith, Marc Gellman, Newsweek (Web-Exclusive Commentary), June 10, 2005.

Tuesday, June 14, 2005

Invitation to a Hero's Journey

There’s nothing like a good story to capture our imagination – one with a surprising hero and a really scary villain. These are grand stories that draw you in to the adventure. By the time you turn the last page and close the book or leave the movie theater, you’re sure that there is a Frodo, a Luke Skywalker or a Dorothy somewhere inside of you. You’re waiting to invited on your quest, and you will be.

Of course you will. After all, what did Frodo, Luke Skywalker, and Dorothy have that you don’t have? Well, ok, maybe, you don’t have a ring of unimaginable power or a really tall wizard friend like Gandalf. And then again, you don’t have a light saber, a little green Jedi master or Obi Wan to teach you about the Force. You don’t even have ruby slippers or a good witch in a beautiful pink dress to help you use them. So how could you be a hero?

You might not believe it, but it’s more likely than you think. Let’s look at the story of a hero. To start with, at the beginning of their stories, Frodo, Luke Skywalker and Dorothy don’t look much like heroes. Frodo was a Hobbit, which means that he’s small, simple, not a great warrior, quite childlike and an orphan living in an unexciting, quiet place. Luke Skywalker, if you’ve ever seen the original Star Wars movie, was young, kind of small, an orphan living an unexciting life as a water farmer of all things. Dorothy, was a young girl, that no body listened to, an orphan living on a farm in Kansas. While they live with relatives, aunts and uncles, they felt like they didn’t belong. They all dreamed of a world beyond – somewhere over the rainbow, out among the stars, beyond the edges of the shire where adventure waits.

Into each of their lives, came a moment. Their quiet days were shaken up and they were sent on a journey, on a quest. Luke met Obi-wan who tolds him who he really is and taught him about the force. For little Frodo, Gandalf, the magnificent wizard came to visit and told him that the ring given to him by his uncle Bilbo Baggins, holds unimaginable power and it was Frodo’s responsibility to keep it from falling into evil hands. Dorothy, as you all know, was picked up by a tornado and dropped into Munchkinland and into danger and adventure. Glinda the Good Witch gave her the ruby slippers and told her that they are very powerful indeed. On her journey, Dorothy was to keep them safe from the Wicked Witch. The only thing that Frodo, Luke or Dorothy had to do was to say “yes, I’ll go” and the journey began.

One important part of any hero’s story is that they never go alone. Along the way, they meet and gather wonderful friends. Sometimes the friends save our hero, sometimes the hero saves the friends. It’s all a part of the adventure. Frodo, or course, traveled in the company of the Fellowship of the Ring, wizards, elves, dwarves, kings in disguise and mighty warriors and of course, Merry and Pippen and Sam, his loyal Hobbit friends. Frodo’s task was heavy but as he went, he was never alone. Luke Skywalker, traveling with Obi Wan and his unusual droids C3PO and R2D2, met Han Solo, Chewbacca, Princess Leia and found Yoda, his greatest teacher. Even when Luke felt alone, the presence of Obi Wan and the teachings of Yoda were always with him.

Think of Dorothy’s friends, the Scarecrow, who wanted a brain, even though he seemed to be full of good ideas already. The Tin Woodsman, worried that he has no heart but who already overflowed with love and emotion. The Cowardly Lion who always managed to do the very thing that scared him the most. And Dorothy’s constant little companion – Toto. Did you know that Toto’s name is a word in Latin that means “everything?” Dorothy, the Scarecrow, Tin Woodsman and the Cowardly Lion always had “everything” they needs with them. Every hero learns that.

There’s another really important story about a great hero who was born in a stable in Bethlehem. Jesus’s story begins when he is a tiny, defenseless baby. From early on, he surprises his family as he talks about his true Father and being in his Father’s house. He met his great teacher, John the Baptist and gathered his wonderful friends, Peter and James and John, and the rest of the Disciples. And everywhere he went, the voice from Heaven and the whisper of the Spirit, let him know that he was never alone.

By the end of every hero’s story, they have reached their destination. Luke Skywalker has saved the galaxy from the Darth Vader and evil empire, Frodo has destroyed the ring and leaves with the elves. Dorothy has accomplished all of her tasks, her friends have what they wanted and she understands that she can go anywhere and do anything. Jesus’ great heros journey has conquered death and made us all one family – we are all the children of God.

Now what on earth does this have to do with you? Quite simply - everything! Not just those of you who are going on to high school. Everyone of you has a hero’s journey in your future. At some point, you will be called to begin a new thing. Will you be ready to say, “yes, I’ll go!”

What will make you a her? Will you stand up to a bully, for yourself or someone else? Will you search for a truth that others might try to hide? Will you give yp some of what you have or want to help others? When you follow the hero’s path, your talents might take you to strange and unfamiliar places, But along the way, you will find your brain, you will find your heart courage and you will find the courage to live the wonder of your journey. You will learn to be the one that God needs to do a particular thing, at a particular time and place. You will have family, friends and teachers as companions and Jesus as your guide. Jesus invites you into your own hero’s journey to rescue the world from hatred and division and seeing people as different and scary instead of as brothers and sisters. Jesus might whisper to your heart, “save the world with love, your quest is to vanquish fear – to create a world of peace.

You can do it because we have Jesus’ words today that he is the vine and we are the branches of his story. We’ve been given, not a light saber or ruby slippers, but the cross. The cross is not for telling people that they are wrong but for telling them that love is stronger than anything in the universe. Armed with the Force that is love, you are set on the path of the hero to do nothing less than save the world. Are you ready to go?