I’m a Proud Grandmother at the moment –
my two grandsons have been invited to extra
training by their local football club;
one of them to goalkeeper training,
and one to extra under-6 training.
So Robert and I are very proud of them both,
and hope they grow up to enjoy playing for their
team, no matter what level.
Playing for a team is great, isn’t it?
I don’t have all that much experience, as I was
never very good at games,
but at one of the competitions in France that
Robert and I used to skate at,
they used to award the country with the most
points a trophy.
That was frequently team GB, not because we had
the best skaters –
we didn’t –
but because we mostly fielded the largest team!
But even still, there is simply nothing on earth
like the feeling you get when you are standing there, by the podium,
and the National Anthem is played and the Union
Flag is raised!
It’s great being part of a team, isn’t it?
Or perhaps being part of a group, or a gang of
friends.
At least it can be.
But suppose you are left out?
Suppose you’re the one who is always the last to
be chosen
because you’re hopeless at games?
Suppose you’re the one they jeer at and laugh
at?
Suppose my grandsons find that, when the time
comes to pick teams, they are always either left out or in the most
hopeless team,
the one that is not expected to win….
Here’s another suppose.
Suppose you were part of a group whose function in
life was to do nice things for people –
perhaps you did shopping for old people, say,
or you knitted blanket squares for charity.
And your group got together each week to catch up
on what you’d been doing, and perhaps have a meal together,
or generally have a bit of fun together.
You’re a group, a gang, and it shows.
People know who you are.
They like you.
But then supposing you suddenly discovered that
someone else was doing the same nice things as you were.
The specky, nerdish kid that nobody likes.
He was also fetching shopping for old people,
or knitting blanket squares for charity,
or whatever it was.
I wonder how you’d react.
Would you think, oh, that’s nice, good for him.
Or would you think, here, how dare he?
He’s not one of us, what does he think he’s
doing?
We’re the only ones who do that job!
I think both Jesus and Moses came up against this
attitude in our readings today.
“How dare they!
They’re not part of our group –
tell them to stop!”
For Jesus, it was when one of the disciples
discovered that someone else was casting out demons in Jesus’ name,
but it wasn’t anybody they knew and, as far as
they were concerned,
he had never met Jesus and he wasn’t One of
Them.
“We tried to make him stop,” explains John,
“but he wouldn’t!”
But what was Jesus’ reaction?
“Don't stop him.
No one can use my name to do something good and
powerful, and in the next breath cut me down.
If he's not an enemy, he's an ally.
Why, anyone by just giving you a cup of water in
my name is on our side.
Count on it that God will notice.”
And something very much the same has happened in
our Old Testament reading, too.
Moses has got fed up again –
Moses frequently gets fed up!
This time, the children of Israel have been
grumbling because they don’t like the food.
God has been supplying them with Manna –
nobody knows quite what that was,
but it was a basic food source for them while they
were wandering in the desert.
Anyway, although they hated being in slavery in
Egypt,
they are beginning to miss all the fish,
and the melons,
the leeks,
the cucumbers,
the onions
and the garlic.
Well, I don’t blame them, really –
I think I’d miss those things if I couldn’t
have them!
But not worth being a slave for!
Anyway, God is a bit cross with them and says that
okay, they want meat –
fine, he’ll give them so much meat they’ll get
sick and tired of it!
At this stage, Moses doesn’t know how on earth
God plans to do this –
later, we learn it was flocks of quails,
which are a type of rather delicious game bird –
and it all seems a bit much, so he gets his 70
elders, his team leaders, together to pray.
And while this is happening, the Holy Spirit falls
on the elders,
and they begin to speak forth God’s word.
This was unusual in those days –
the Holy Spirit didn’t come to people as a
matter of routine,
in the way that he does today,
so when it did happen, it was thought to be a mark
of God’s favour.
And there are two of the elders who, for whatever
reason, haven’t joined the gathering.
Their names are Eldad and Medad, and they have
stayed in the camp –
but because they are elders, the Holy Spirit has
also fallen on them.
Oh dear.
So, of course, someone comes running up to tell
Moses, and his heir, Joshua –
the same Joshua for whom the book of the Bible is
named –
says “Well, aren’t you going to stop them?”
Moses, I think, roars with laughter.
“Are you jealous for me?
I wish that all God's
people were prophets.
I wish that God
would put his Spirit on all of them.”
A wish that, of course, came true at Pentecost.
But do you see?
It’s all about wanting to exclude people, isn’t
it?
They’re not part of the gang, so they can’t do
what we do.
They mustn’t be allowed.
They must stop casting out demons in Jesus’
name, or they must stop speaking forth God’s word in prophecy.
Oh dear.
Not good.
Well, yes, we know that in theory, but do we know
it in practice?
It’s all too easy to exclude people, isn’t it?
For a wide variety of reasons.
Primary school kids sometimes form gangs whose
whole idea is to exclude the opposite sex:
No Girls Allowed;
No Boys allowed.
That’s relatively harmless, of course –
but then you get the ones who exclude people whose
skin colour is different, or who perhaps have some kind of
disability.
Or who are of a different religion –
it is a very short step between reckoning that
they’re mistaken in what they believe, to reckoning they,
themselves are bad people for believing it.
None of this is nice;
it’s the road to ethnic cleansing, to genocide,
to the Holocaust.
A road humanity has trodden all too often, and
will probably tread all too often in the future.
But almost worst is when it happens in the Church.
You will probably know better than I do the story
of what happened when Black Christians first came over to this
country with the Empire Windrush and its successors,
and it’s not pretty.
But that’s not the only form of exclusion, even
if it is the most obvious one.
You may or may not know that this Circuit supports
a charity called L’Arche, which describes itself as “a worldwide
federation of people, with and without learning disabilities, working
together for a world where all belong”.
One of their communities is quite near here, and
one of the Circuit’s former Manses is used as a hostel for some of
their workers.
All well and good –
but I wonder how comfortable we would be if a
group of people from the local community rocked up to church one
Sunday to worship with us?
I hate to have to admit it, but I’m not sure I
would be very comfortable just at first, not until I got to know the
people. Would you?
Or if, as happened in a parish in Stoke-on-Trent a
couple of years ago, we were overwhelmed by an influx of refugees
looking for somewhere to warm up,
just for an hour or so…
and were unable to do so at the local Mosque, for
whatever reason?
I gather the church in Stoke-on-Trent was not at
all pleased with its vicar for opening the doors to refugees, and
many left –
but many new people have joined the church and
been baptised, because of the welcome they received.
And for others, they just want a place where they
are able to pray,
even if they don’t yet want to become Christian.
Could we do something like that if God asked us?
Would we?
Or how welcoming would you feel if a gay or
lesbian couple joined us for worship – again, I’m quite sure once
we got to know them, we’d accept them for who they are and like
them very much
but, as you know, you never get a second chance to
make a first impression.
And if you get thrown by their arrival, and show
you’re thrown –
well, maybe they’d get the impression they
weren’t welcome?
And maybe if they did feel welcome, they might
bring their friends….
Oh dear.
We really aren’t very good at being tolerant and
open and affirming and welcoming, are we?
It’s partly human nature, of course; we come to
this church because this is where we feel at home, this is where our
friends are.
It’s our Christian community, and we like it
just the way it is.
But the church exists, as I’m sure you’ve
heard me say before, for the benefit of those who are not yet its
members,
not just for those who are!
And we don’t like that, so we try to limit God:
who is in, who is out?
Who’s in God’s gang?
But God doesn’t.
We’re not Christians because of what we do or
don’t believe;
we’re Christians because God loves us and has
sent his Son to die for us.
We have responded to that, but that’s not what
has saved us –
God has!
Some years ago now, there was a man in America
who, for a variety of reasons, decided to spend this year worshipping
in a different church every Sunday,
not just Christian churches, either, but Jewish
and all sorts.
I followed his blog for a couple of months;
I can’t remember how I first found it.
It was fascinating reading his journal, and
watching his faith grow and develop.
On one occasion, he went to a church that he found
constraining –
they were, for his taste, too negative, too full
of “Thou shalt nots”.
And after some thought –
and argument with people from that church who
commented on his reflections –
and a Sunday spent worshipping in a Church that
was rather more to his taste, he had this to say:
“I don't care who you are,
what you've done,
who you voted for,
how often you read the Bible,
or what your political stance is on gay marriage
or abortion.
I don't care if you are gay, straight, or
bisexual.
I don't care if you've had sex with a thousand
people
or you're forty years old and saving yourself for
marriage.
I don't care if you are Methodist, Catholic,
Muslim,
or you sat next to me at the Church of
Scientology.
GOD LOVES YOU.
Not because of what you can do for him,
but because he's freaking God,
so he doesn't need you to do a damn thing.
He loves you because he made you.
He created you to be the jacked up person you are,
and he loves you in spite of your flaws.
You're the Prodigal Son.
So am I.
And God is running toward us with open arms.
Nothing else matters except his desire to welcome
us back home.
And he's waiting.
Despite the thousands of rules Pharisees will lay
on you to convince you that you're unworthy of God's love,
God says you are worthy because of the sacrifice
Jesus made two thousand years ago.
Period.
Bottom line.
End of story.”
To which I could only respond:
“Amen!”
And, that being the case, how dare we exclude
anybody?
They may not worship God the same way we do;
they may look different, or behave differently.
They may have quite different views about all
sorts of issues that we think are important.
But, as Jesus said, “Why, anyone by just giving
you a cup of water in my name is on our side.
Count on it that God will notice.”
And then Jesus went on to give a warning:
“On the other hand, if someone –
however insignificant they might seem –
is believing in me and you put up a road block and
turn them back,
you’ll be made to pay for it.
You’d have been better off being dumped in the
middle of the bay wearing concrete boots.”
You see, it does matter.
We are all part of God’s kingdom, and woe betide
us if we try to exclude anybody, or try to make someone else feel
they don’t fit in.
God is Love –
and woe betide us if we try to cut anybody off
from that love.
Just because they aren’t on our team doesn’t
mean they’re crap players!
No comments:
Post a Comment