Prophecy
and Mysticism: the intimate connection
Texts: Amos 7.7-17; Psalm 82;
Colossians 1.1-14; Luke 10. 25-37
Today I want to share with you a great puzzlement of mine, a puzzlement
which arose from a particular set of historical circumstances,
circumstances which may well have shaped my life and thinking more
deeply and profoundly than almost any-thing, or any-one, else.
'Why is it', I ask myself, 'why is it that the Beatles released All You
Need is Love, that song of all songs, and then, and then they broke
up?' . . . It is a puzzle, is it not, this predilection in
human beings for separating those things that God intended to be
together. I mean, let's think about it for a moment. Love
and sex . . . Work and vocation . . . Christmas
and being happy . . . Toil and rest . . . Lennon
& McCartney. . . Hey, even Michael Jackson and
being an African American! I mean, what is it with
us? What is it that makes human beings want to pull things
apart? Why does the experience of equilibrium, balance, harmony
scare us so?
Now, we're a bunch of Christians here today. And we are just as
prone to blowing things apart as anyone else. But more so.
Because the people of God have an alarmingly persistent capacity to
blow apart the most fundamental relationship of them all, the chord
which sets the tone for everything else. And its simply
this: being with God . . . and doing God's
work. Being with God . . . and doing God's work.
Picture the people the prophet Amos was dealing with. These were
seriously screwed people, I'm telling you. Amos complains that
the leading citizens of Israel, the priests of Yahweh amongst them, had
become traffickers in human flesh. 'They sell the righteous for
silver, and the needy for a pair of sandals', he says. 'They
grind the poor into the dust' he says. But all the while, as this
is going on, what are these same leaders up to? Well.
They're keeping up appearances aren't they! They're heading out
to the holy places of Bethel and Gilgal to offer their sacrifices and
their songs of praise to Yahweh! Needless to say, God is not
impressed. In fact, he's very, very, upset. 'I hate, I
despise your festivals; I take no delight in your solemn assemblies . .
. Take away from me the noise of your songs; I will not listen to
the melody of your harps. But let justice roll down like waters,
and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream'. Now, fairly
obviously, the religious folk of Amos' time had a problem with
hypocrisy. The leaders of Samaria had separated the worship of God from
the doing of God's work. They thought they could fill their
cupboards with the produce of other people's labour and still turn up
to church; they imagined that God wouldn't be overly concerned with
their slavery auctions so long as they continued to tithe. They
were wrong! That's fairly obvious in hindsight. But have
you ever considered how it is that they came to lose their way in the
first place? How deeply religious people turned into colonizers
and slave-traders?
To ask that question is to step down from the high pulpit of the
prophet and ask why, for example, Martin Luther King, hero of faith,
was unfaithful to his wife on more than one occasion. Or why the
church missions, committed to the welfare of Aboriginal people,
colluded in the removal of children not just from their parents and
communities, but from each other as well. To ask that question is
to withdraw the pointing finger of hindsight and turn, instead, toward
the mirror of one's own self. 'How is it that I, a person
committed to Christ and his work, do the things that I do and say the
things that I say? Because surely many of those things that I do,
and fail to do, are not after the way of Jesus, whom I claim to follow'.
Let me suggest an answer to that question, an answer which comes from
my reflections not only upon Scripture and upon the behaviour of
others, but also upon my own life, my own behaviour, my own sin.
Christian people become instruments of oppression and abuse when they
cease to pray. Let me repeat that. Christian people become
agents of abuse when they cease to pray.
'Wait a minute', I hear you say, 'those people in Amos' time prayed a
lot. They were always in church praying and singing hymns.
But it obviously had no effect on what they did. So how do you
figure that?'. Well, let me suggest to you that there's a great
big difference between making a lot of noise in church and
praying. Indeed, that making a lot of noise is often the very
opposite of prayer. But rather than rush at what I mean here too
quickly, I'd like to put the foot on the brake for a moment and invite
you, instead, to attend to that parable which we head from Luke's
gospel earlier on. And to hear it, perhaps, in a different key
than you've heard it before.
I want to make just two observations about the parable this
morning. There's much more that could be said, but this morning I
want to limit myself to just these two things. First, did you
notice the question the lawyer didn't ask Jesus? You'll remember
they'd been speaking about the two great commandments: 'Love God with
all your heart and soul and mind and strength, and love your neighbour
as yourself'. 'Do this, and you will live', Jesus had said.
And then the lawyer asked 'Who is my neighbour'. Which is a
perfectly fine question, except that it betrays a fatal kind of
arrogance about the side of the equation he perhaps should have asked
about. 'Who is my God?' This lawyer, you see, was a faculty
member of the local theological school. You know, the prestigious
one. In Jerusalem. On the hill. Next to the
temple. He knew all about God. Or thought he did.
He'd probably written several books on the topic. So why ask
about something he already knew everything about?
Second, did you notice that Jesus didn't actually answer the lawyer's
question—the one he asked, as opposed to the one he didn't ask?
The lawyer asked 'who is my neighbour', and Jesus replied not with a
definition of the neighbour, but with a story about how neighbours
behave. About the being of a neighbour, if you like. Now
why would he do that? Why would he deliberately sidestep the
lawyer's question like that? I submit to you that the story of
the good samaritan is actually an answer to the question the lawyer
failed to ask: 'Who is God'. And I submit that Jesus told
the story because this lawyer, despite all his learning and his
knowledge, did not know the answer to that question. That God is
like a samaritan. God is the stranger who has mercy on us,
without ever having a reason to do so.
How do good men and women of God become abusers? By failing to
understand that God is one who has mercy. By not, in other words,
ever really experiencing the grace and mercy of God for
themselves. Oh, we may have the theory of grace down pat.
We may know the bible verses off by heart. We may even sing about
God's love week by week in church. But somehow the truth of that
grace, that mercy, has never really taken root in our hearts. We
have never allowed ourselves to face the sheer givenness of the gift:
we have never allowed ourselves to confront the possibility that we
might accept God's acceptance of us. And so, not being able to
accept ourselves, and love ourselves, we fail to love others.
With the same plumbline we use to abuse ourselves, we abuse these
precious others that God places in our path. And we do so, very
often, without even a shade of awareness that we do it.
There is only one real solution to the problem I have described.
And I am convinced of this more and more. We must dedicate some
special time each day, each week, each month, each year, to what the
mystics of the church call the prayer of the heart. A prayer
which consists not of telling God things, or presenting God with a
shopping list, or even saying the daily office, valuable as it
is. The prayer of the heart is simply becoming still enough to
hear the voice of God. The still, quiet voice at the centre of
all things. The voice whose nature is always to have mercy, to
offer grace and forgiveness, to heal the wounded soul. The voice
which speaks not in English, or German or even Italian, that most
divine of languages, but in the soothing language of love's silent gaze.
God has ordained that the work of God should flow from a deep and
abiding being with God, from a veritable baptism in the love which
holds all things together in Christ. Doing and being, mission and
ritual, politics and prayer. What God has joined together let no
one separate. That is how we may become citizens of light.
That is how we may finally bear fruit for the word sown in us. By
bringing such things back together again. And folks, I say this
in all seriousness: our future as individuals, as families and
communities, and even as a nation, depends on our doing so.
In the name of God - Father, Son and Holy Spirit - as in the
beginning, so now and for ever. Amen.
Garry
Deverell
6th Sunday after Pentecost
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