If I Ran the Garden--March 27, 2025
Wednesday, March 26, 2025
If I Ran the Garden--March 27, 2025
If I Ran the Garden--March 27, 2025
Tuesday, March 25, 2025
The Unconventional Offer--March 26, 2025
The Unconventional Offer--March 26, 2025
"Ho, everyone who thirsts, come to the waters;
and you that have no money,
come, buy and eat!
Come, buy wine and milk
without money and without price.
Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread,
and your labor for that which does not satisfy?"
Listen carefully to me, and eat what is good,
and delight yourselves in rich food. (Isaiah 55:1-2)
Conventional wisdom says, "If you got it at a cheap price, it can't be of good quality."
Common sense says, "If you don't make a sizeable profit, it's bad business."
The God of the Scriptures says, "I'm giving away the good stuff for free--why would you go anywhere else?"
And that, dear ones, is the difference between the logic of the market on the one hand and the economy of grace on the other. The people lauded as great "deal-makers" and savvy entrepreneurs in our culture are only interested in making a buck, while the living God is interested in giving graciously to the empty-handed. You can decide whose approach you want to follow, I suppose, but you can't pick both. They are pointed in opposite directions. So choose wisely.
This passage from what we call the book of Isaiah, which many of us heard read in worship this past Sunday, had to have sounded shocking to the ears that first heard it. Come and get what is good for free? Really? Not just water, which might have been available from a river, spring, or well, but milk, wine, and bread? Who would do such a thing? Who would give away valuable commodities (surely even more valuable back in the sixth century BC when there weren't dairy departments and wine aisle in every grocery store) without maximizing a profit? Especially if you had customers who were desperate for the essentials to feed their families, as surely many of the returned exiles who first heard these words from the prophet were. No, if you have high demand, the first Law of Economics is that increased demand leads to increased prices! If you have something everybody needs, and times are already hard, you can get away with charging anything you want! When you have your customer-base over a barrel, you can practically name your price! That is literally Business 101 thinking. There are lengths you might go to for the sake of closing a deal and pleasing a customer, but you don't just give away the store. That's crossing a line.
But here is God, calling to a bunch of needy refugees from Babylon looking to start over in their ancestral homeland, throwing out the economics textbook and crossing the line from "good customer service" to "recklessly generous giving." Why would God just give away good things to people who are hungry and thirsty and want to feed their families? Well, because it turns out that God has always cared about people more than profits, and because God isn't interested in a relationship with us on the terms of vendor-to-customer, but parent-to-child, Lover-to-Beloved, Redeemer-to-Redeemed. God crosses the line and breaks the boundary from good business sense into gracious blessing, because that's just who God is. And it turns out that God has just never been all that interested in asking, "What's in it for me?" or "Why would I do a sucker-thing like helping someone without getting something in return?" God has only ever been interested in loving us, not profiting off of us.
Of course, part of the tragedy that Isaiah 55 alludes to here is that so often we human beings choose foolishly and go chasing after the snake-oil salesmen and price-gouging peddlers who try to profit off of our habit of seeking the things that don't satisfy. God keeps giving away good, cool, clean, refreshing water right from the spring, and we keep buying giant-sized fluorescent-colored Big Gulps in unnatural flavors that have no meaning or referent in the real world (What is "Baja blast" or "Purple Thunder"?). God keeps offering genuine love, and we keep settling for counterfeits that are measured in social media "likes" and "follows." God keeps offering authentic justice as our way of life, and we keep chasing after a vision of "Me and My Group First" instead. God keeps calling us into real community, and we keep separating ourselves into exclusive little clubs, gated developments, and cliques. In other words, God keeps offering us the good stuff for free, and we human beings keep insisting on paying more for shoddy knock-offs. And that is a downright shame.
Maybe today is a day to hear God's unconventional offer with new ears, and finally to be done with the ways we have chased mirages and wasted our money on things that didn't satisfy. Maybe today is a day to be done with the kind of obsessions with profits and deals that cannot recognize the gift of grace staring us right in the face. Maybe today is a day in which, when we hear God's invitation, "Come to the waters," we drop what we are doing and come with empty hands to receive.
And maybe we can tell a neighbor along the way about the Recklessly Generous God who is giving it all away.
Lord God, teach us to stop spending our lives on the things that don't satisfy, and instead to receive the good things you give freely.
Monday, March 24, 2025
Jesus Calls Baloney--March 25, 2025
Jesus Calls Baloney--March 25, 2025
[Jesus said:] "Or those eighteen who were killed when the tower of Siloam fell on them--do you think they were worse offenders than all the others living in Jerusalem? No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all perish just as they did." (Luke 13:4-5
Jesus has a way of preventing people from punching down. You know what I mean?
Jesus often will intervene in a situation when someone who is already in a vulnerable situation or marginalized position is getting ganged up on or picked on by others who have more power, clout, or status. He steps in to stop the bullies and to silence the ones who use their situation to look down on others (or hold them down).
It's the scene with the lynch-mob and the woman caught in adultery, where Jesus shuts them all down with the proposal that the one who is without sin gets to throw the first stone... until they all walk away. Or it's the time when the disciples assume that a person born blind is being punished by God (or that his parents are being punished) by the blindness, and Jesus tells them that their thinking is all wrong. Or when the Respectable Religious people grumble that Jesus is at the much-hated tax collector Zacchaeus' house, Jesus silences them all by insisting that Zacchaeus, too, is a child of God worthy of redemption. That's just Jesus' thing: he's always putting himself in the middle of the bullies and their targets, and he makes it clear that God has no part in kicking people when they are down. And I have to tell you--this is one of the things I have come to love most about Jesus--even though it also makes me uncomfortable at the same time, because I am so often a coward who isn't brave enough to speak up like he does. Jesus never joins the side of the bullies; he always speaks up for the ones who are belittled.
This is one of those times, even if it's hard at first to see what's being said here. Let's unpack this verse that continues along in the reading that many of us heard this past Sunday in worship. Yesterday we looked at the case of some Galileans whom the Roman governor Pilate had executed without trial or due process while they were in the act of worshiping in the Temple, and Jesus insisted that this terrible thing wasn't a sign that they were worse sinners or being singled out by God for wrath. Now as the scene continues, Jesus goes further and offers another example--this time without the complicating factor of the empire. He pulls an example from the headlines of the day--apparently a tower had fallen in the city of Jerusalem, and eighteen people were killed in the accident. Now, the conventional wisdom of the day would have said, "Well, when an accident like this happens, this must have been God's punishment for the ones who were killed." The unspoken assumption of a lot of folks in the world is still basically the same: when a bad thing happens in your life, it's a sign of God's disapproval. So now not only are you hurting, but you've got a truck-load of guilt piled on top, too, pinning you underneath. Talk about adding insult to injury!
That's basically what Jesus is dealing with in this conversation: the people who have come to Jesus in this story picture a world in which suffering is translatable to sin. Therefore, in their view, the people who were killed by the collapse of a tower are not victims to be mourned, but evildoers to be scorned. They see God taking sides against those eighteen who died beneath the rubble, and presumably they would say the same about whatever other natural disaster might happen tomorrow, or whatever accident might happen next week. This perspective sees everyone who suffers, from rain on your wedding day to the terminal cancer diagnosis, as recipients of divine retribution, and therefore, not worthy of our compassion or empathy, but only our condemnation.
And to all of that, Jesus definitively calls "Baloney!"
"Do you think those victims who died when the tower fell were worse offenders than everyone else in the city?" he asks sardonically. "No, I tell you!" That's not how it works--the accident that took their lives was not God's laser-guided precision judgment on them, and for that matter, those who weren't affected by the accident don't get to say that they are perfect and pure in God's sight, either. Jesus is dismantling the mindset that pictures God heaping on insult to add to injury when people suffer. He is rejecting the worldview that allows those in positions of strength and stability to punch down at the people they see struggling beneath them. And he is tearing down any theology that says, "When you suffer in life, it is a sign of God's wrath against you."
The implication, of course, is that God--<gasp!>--just might choose to stand with the victims, the sufferers, and the sorrowful. Jesus wants us to see God, less as the Cosmic Referee handing out lightning bolts like penalties, and more as the empathic Comforter of Those Who Grieve, the Lifter of Those Bowed Down, and the Vindicator of Those Who Have Been Stepped On. God is not absent from the victims of tragedy in the world; Jesus insists God is particularly present for them.
And in a sense, this is only the logical continuation of the perspective of the Beatitudes. If Jesus can announce, "Blessed are the poor, the hungry, and those who mourn," without blushing or crossing his fingers, it is because Jesus sincerely believes that suffering is not evidence of God singling you out for your egregious sin. Jesus tells us that's simply not how it works, and thereby opens us up to the possibility that God is present especially for those who suffer, not merely rewarding good behavior with convenient parking spaces and sunny weather. Jesus, in other words, shows us a God who crosses the line to stand with those who are troubled, those who are victimized, and those who endure tragedy, rather than a distant deity perched up on the cloud tops doling out disasters left and right. This is how God's love works.
Taking Jesus seriously will probably overturn a lot of what we took for granted about how God operates in the world, especially if we have ever been the ones explaining some natural disaster as God's judgment on "those people" (the way Respectable Religious talking heads so often do when there is an earthquake or a hurricane). It is always tempting to view someone else's tragedy as a punishment from God, because the mere fact that you didn't have to deal with a fire, or a tornado, or a tsunami can make you feel like you are better than those who did. Jesus puts a stop to all of that. He just outright calls baloney on that whole program of bad theology, in order that we might come to recognize God crossing lines and choosing to side with the sufferers rather than the ones who are punching down.
Maybe we could stand to actually listen to Jesus, even if it calls us to a new kind of bravery or forces us to re-think what we thought we knew about God, and to see the presence of God among all who are hurting on this day. What might that do to the way we spend our time, our energy, and our love today?
Lord God, help us to see you where you are among those who hurt, and to let go of our old assumptions about your ways in the world.
Sunday, March 23, 2025
For the Disappeared--March 24, 2025
Thursday, March 20, 2025
Love Without Shame--March 21, 2025
Love Without Shame--March 21, 2025
"For while we were still weak, at the right time Christ died for the ungodly. Indeed, rarely will anyone die for a righteous person--though perhaps for a good person someone might actually dare to die. But God proves his love for us in that while we were still sinners Christ died for us." [Romans 5:6-8]