The
twelve disciples were ready to go out into the world. Onward and upward! We found that out last week. Each one had chosen to accept the seemingly
impossible mission that Jesus set before them:
Loving when loving would appear to be impossible or, at the very least,
highly disagreeable and even fearsome.
In accepting their mission, of course, the twelve also embraced the
profound responsibility they shouldered for the powers that had been bestowed
upon them.
In
spite of any initial misgivings, they were about to embark on a faith journey
that would lead them down dusty urban alleyways and backwater rural communities
in order to heal the sick, touch the untouchable, cast out demons, and even
raise the dead in Jesus’ name. Quite a courageous
undertaking, to be sure – seeing as how Jesus had told them in more ways than
one that they had an excellent chance of being rejected along the way –
sometimes by entire towns and villages. He likened their journey to sheep
finding themselves penned in with wolves.
Not a great real confidence booster!
Jesus
had coached Peter, James, John, and the others in how to behave and what they
should take with them. First off, they
were to share in his own poverty, sense of homelessness, and lack of permanent
roots. He told them they were to carry
no money – gold, silver, or copper. That
being said, they were also under no circumstances to pretend to be beggars in
order to ensure their evening meal or a place to sleep. Instead they were to simply offer a greeting
of peace - and hope for the best. Talk
about heading out on a wing and a prayer!
Jesus indicated that they would not need to
carry a roller board or backpack either.
You see, he told them that the clothes on their back would be sufficient
– not even an extra pair of sandals should a strap break or a walking stick to
steady them on the long miles ahead. At
least, that is what the Gospel writer of Matthew outlines for us earlier in the
chapter we just read.
According
to this Gospel writer, Jesus had also given his followers a whole host of
instructions, which we learned about last Sunday. Remember? The disciples were to be courageous enough
to speak out on difficult issues that flew in the face of God’s dream for the
world. They were not to be bullied by
those who would surely laugh at their quaintly archaic perspectives.
They
were not to be shut down by those who would loudly insist that non-violence was
impractical in a world where tempers flared and terrorists roamed, or that compassion
would only cause you to lose your shirt, or that all the indigent needed to do
was show a bit of hutzpah, pull themselves up by their bootstraps, find jobs,
and quit feeling so entitled to government handouts like Medicaid and
healthcare subsidies.
Jesus
told them not to let destructive family relationships get in the way of the
Gospel message either. Instead, he
instructed them to bind themselves to and support communities – churches maybe
- where like-minded people would work together for the kingdom that Jesus kept
talking about, the kingdom that they had quickly discovered was the way life
should be.
However,
above all, he reminded them that they should undertake this perilous faith
journey trusting that they never traveled alone. The Spirit always hovered in their midst,
nudging them here and there when the going got particularly tough.
When
you come right down to it, the disciples were pretty vulnerable when they set
out. Sure – they could raise the dead, but not being card-carrying NRA members,
they had nothing tangible for their own protection and little to ensure their
wellbeing.
When
you think about it, they were dependent on the women and men they met along the
way. They could only extend their
greeting of peace (“Peace be with you”) even as they proclaimed and lived out
what Jesus had taught them. They had to
trust in the hospitality of those they encountered.
It would be a man moved to generosity who
would share an evening meal with them.
It would be a compassionate person who would offer them a bed. It would be a woman stirred to kindness who
would wash their dirty, tired feet. It
would be a patient person who listened to the story of their day’s
journey.
Their
wellbeing was beyond their own control.
They were on their own unless someone took them in. Their welfare depended on the
tender-heartedness of the strangers they encountered. They had to rely on those who had something
to share. They counted on anyone who
would extend a radical welcome.
Jesus
told the twelve that they had to put themselves out there and see what would
happen. And so they did – and because we
are sitting here in church this morning, we have to presume that it worked as
Jesus said it might. There was something
to be said for not only offering but also receiving hospitality.
Welcome
to Walmart! Welcome to church! Welcome to Applebee’s. Table for two? Unfortunately, the art of welcoming and
hospitality has lost much of its original import and flavor over the
millennia. There is a certain breezy
rote to it now.
It
is like the woman who had invited some people to
dinner. At the table, she turned to her six-year-old daughter and said,
"Would you like to say the blessing?"
"I wouldn't know what to
say," the little girl replied.
"Just say what you hear Mommy
say," the mother said.
The little girl bowed her head and
said, "Dear Lord, why on earth did I invite all these people to
dinner?"
Gone
are the days when the Biblical character Abraham welcomed three strangers who
showed up on his desert doorstep and ushered them out of the blazing sun. He and his wife Sarah prepared a feast for
them only to find that, when dinner was over and the strangers had moved on, they
had been entertaining angels, unaware.
Gone are the days when Mary broke open her alabaster jar of expensive
oil and poured the perfume over Jesus’ feet, drying them with her hair as a
sign of radical welcome and extravagant hospitality.
And
yet, time and time again, as Episcopal writer Barbara Brown Taylor notes, "the Holy Spirit comes knocking at the
door, disturbing our members-only meeting and reminding us that it is time to
share." It is time to welcome
the stranger and share our nation with the world’s refugees, no matter their
religious heritage. What are the words etched at the base of the Statue of
Liberty? “Give me your tired, your poor,
your huddled masses yearning to be free.”
It is time to welcome
the impoverished throughout the world by more equitably sharing our resources
and demanding less in return – even if that means canceling debt and no longer
having limitless choices at our meals. It is time to ensure that we have a planet suitable for
sharing with our children and grandchildren.
As Christians, it is time to open our hearts, even as many around us are
closing theirs.
I remember on
one of my 60-mile Susan G. Komen breast cancer walks, my sister and I were
walking through a neighborhood outside of Philadelphia. At the end of one driveway, a boy of about
five or six sat on a small chair with a single 16 ounce bottle of water and a
bunch of those little paper Dixie cups.
As we walked
by, he poured a tiny bit of water in a cup and offered it to each walker. Just as a tired dusty walker in Palestine
loved a cup of cold water in Jesus’ day, so this 60-mile walker appreciated the
kindness of that little boy.
Anyone can
offer a gift that small. That is what Jesus said in this passage we read. None of us is too old, too young, too busy,
too financially strapped to share something, to extend hospitality.
But what is in
it for us, you might ask? What do we get out of all this faithful living? Jesus
says at the very end of these verses that there is a reward. Well, what is it? A fast track to heaven? Stars in our crown? Endless prosperity?
As one blogger
wrote, “Surely there has to be some kind of reward for serving faithfully! The first disciples certainly felt this was
only fair. At one point Peter, who often seemed to be the spokesman for the
others (a bit like a union rep), had this to say to Jesus: ‘We have left
everything to follow you! What then will there be for us?’”
What
is the reward for choosing to live out the Gospel message in our own
lives? What is the reward for putting up
with the laughter and bullying Jesus told his disciples they would have to put
up with? What is the reward for speaking out and for being the hands and feet
of Jesus in this day and age?
The
reward is this: Experiencing, if only
for a moment, God’s dream realized – and in that brief moment knowing
viscerally that what we are called to do as Jesus’ followers is worth the
bullying, the derisive laughter, and the culture all around us screaming it
cannot be done.
The
reward is seeing a child fed, a family held together, a refugee saved. The
reward is seeing that God’s dream can become a reality – here, now, in this
nation - and that we have a role in making that happen. And if that is not
enough of a reward, well, I shudder for the world.
Oh sure, there are
those who will tell us that the church is dying and that our message is
outdated and unworkable. Jesus warned
the disciples about that – and he was right.
There
were those who rejected the twelve and those who turned their backs on
them. But there were others who were
moved by the compassion they showed as they healed and the kindness they
demonstrated as they listened and the courage they mustered up when they spoke
out against the inequities and iniquities of the Roman world.
In
welcoming the twelve, those ancient men and women demonstrated that which lies
at the core of Christian discipleship - extravagant and radical welcome. It is at the heart of what Jesus preached and
is the foundation of God’s dream for the world. Whoever welcomed those first
disciples, well, it was like welcoming Jesus himself.
And
you know what? I think Jesus knew that
the disciples would be OK on their journey.
I think he knew that – though they may not have had two coins to rub
together or a spare pair of sandals - they did have something of far greater
value to share – and that would be themselves - awash in kindness and
compassion.
I
think Jesus knew that at least some of those people the disciples met would
recognize the gift they brought - and would respond in turn – even down through
ages – even to us. It is as Church of
Scotland pastor Roddy Hamilton reflected in this poem:
gather round
I have a story to tell
of one who reached inside himself
and took a handful of love
like a pile of stardust
and said: this is for you
it is all you need
it is all you will ever need
there is enough here
to change the whole world
take it
many laughed at him
mocked him
and ignored the invitation
I have a story to tell
of one who reached inside himself
and took a handful of love
like a pile of stardust
and said: this is for you
it is all you need
it is all you will ever need
there is enough here
to change the whole world
take it
many laughed at him
mocked him
and ignored the invitation
but some dared to take it
and those who did
noticed something about this love
they found they could do what the gift-giver could do
they could stand with the lost
welcome the traveler
eat with the hungry
they found themselves doing what the man first did to them
give something of themselves to others
they became like the man
offering themselves
and as they offered themselves
others took the invitation
and many still do
and many still trust
it is enough to change the whole world
noticed something about this love
they found they could do what the gift-giver could do
they could stand with the lost
welcome the traveler
eat with the hungry
they found themselves doing what the man first did to them
give something of themselves to others
they became like the man
offering themselves
and as they offered themselves
others took the invitation
and many still do
and many still trust
it is enough to change the whole world
Welcome
to the kingdom, to the way life should be.
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