Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Building A Bigger Table (Opening Worship 2019 Synod Assembly)


Building a Bigger Table
NW MN Synod Assembly/June 7, 2019
Acts 1:1-8 and Ephesians 3:20-21

Dear friends in Christ—grace, mercy and peace be multiplied unto you through Jesus our Risen Savior, who sends us out as his witnesses, to the ends of the earth. 

In the name of Jesus.  Amen.

You and I are creatures of time and place.

We’re thoroughly embedded in time….always living out our days within a single, slender slice of history….forever moving from our past through our present toward our future….

We’re embedded in time….and we’re also hemmed in by place.  We simply cannot be in more than one place at a time…..

You and I, creatures of time and place, can’t really conceive of any other way of living...

…which is why it’s virtually impossible for us to wrap our minds around God.

For God, you see, is not a creature of time or place….because God is the Creator, and therefore the Lord of time and place.   As we confess in the Nicene Creed, God is “the Maker of heaven and earth, of all that is, seen and unseen.” 

God fills all of time, occupies the totality of space, and therefore is not in the least bit limited by the boundaries that contain us.

In these opening verses from the Book of Acts, Jesus’ followers ask him an utterly time-and-place-bound question:    "Lord, is this the time when you will restore the kingdom to Israel?"

Now that’s not really a bad question.  It’s the kind of question creatures of time and place are always asking, especially when they’re bumping up against realities that baffle them.    It’s a question that popped into the heads of Jesus’ disciples quite naturally, caught (as they were) between Jesus’ miserable death on a Roman cross and his surprising reappearance three days later, in the power of the Resurrection.

Jesus was dead….but he’s alive again….so now what?  

The disciples try to squeeze this dead-but-now living Jesus into their time and their space:   “Lord is this the time when you will restore the kingdom to Israel?”

The question suggests that they were hankering for a little political payback:  It’s high time for the Roman occupiers to be put in their place. Their Empire needs to go so Israel can be returned to the fleeting glory it knew back when David was king.   

Notice the verb that the disciples use here:   “Lord is this the time when you will restore the kingdom to Israel?”  

Such is often our fondest hope as well--to return, to be restored to whatever our preferred version of “the good old days” might happen to be!

There’s just one problem with the disciple’s question, though. And that problem isn’t that Jesus’ followers were expecting too much of him, but that they were ready to settle for too little.

….which is how Jesus quickly responds, as paraphrased by the late Eugene Peterson:  “ [Jesus] told them, ‘You don't get to know the time. Timing is the Father's business. What you will get is the Holy Spirit. And when the Holy Spirit comes on you, you will be able to be my witnesses in Jerusalem, all over Judea and Samaria, even to the ends of the world.’”

And just what might that look like—when the disciples start bearing witness to the One who has death behind him and nothing but a wide open future ahead of him?

The disciples ask a very constricted, limited question…and what they get is an expansive, mind-blowing answer--because the One they’re dealing with has an imagination as huge as the whole universe….and a perspective that encompasses both time and eternity.

The disciples are wishing that Jesus might make Israel great again—but what Jesus wants is to make all things new again, to usher in a brand-spanking-new creation!

And it’s all going to start soon, when the Holy Spirit swoops down upon Jesus followers on the Day of Pentecost…fills them with fire, untangles their tongues and places on their lips amazing news that will change everything.

It all starts as Jesus’ followers become witnesses to his life, death and resurrection….first “in Jerusalem” where it all began….then fanning out into the wider neighborhood of Judea and Samaria—the launching pad for these testifiers to start traversing all the conventional boundaries of time and place, propelling them to the very ends of the earth, toward a future that will keep unfolding forever.

This is what happens when human beings are gob-smacked by the Resurrection.   All at once they find themselves living in a new day, inhabiting the fresh creation that the Risen Christ is always opening up.      

Wow!   Isn’t that amazing!??

But wait--it just keeps getting better!....

….Because this same risen Lord Jesus Christ meets you and me today--discombobulating us, as well.

For whenever we’re with this Jesus, all our working assumptions about how life works will be called into question.

When the Risen and Living Christ meets us anew in the Pentecost power of the Holy Spirit, everything that limits us (like our sin), and everything that thwarts us (like the power of the devil), and everything else that holds us back (like our mortality), it all goes off the rails!

And when that happens the last thing we want to do is expect too little of our living, agitating God who “by the power at work within us is able to accomplish abundantly far more than all we can ask or imagine.”   (Ephesians 3:20-21)

Our synod’s theme for this year—and thus, our synod assembly theme is Building a Bigger Table…..or, as I’ve starting saying to myself:  “Building an Infinitely Expanding Table.”

In a world seemingly hemmed in by time and place, the very thought of that seems ridiculous, undoable, impossible….

But in the disruptive, sin-forgiving, death-defying, future-opening power of the Living Christ who transcends both this finite world and God’s infinite Creation….what seems utterly impossible turns out to be a piece of cake.

And that’s exactly what God’s been doing for centuries:   taking small, warped, seemingly useless building materials and refashioning them into realities beyond even our wildest imaginings….

…an ancient couple gifted with land and family in their old age…
….a tongue-tied refugee speaking truth to the power of Egypt’s Pharaoh…
…exiles restored to their longed-for homeland…
…a tiny little Baby shivering in a manager….
…a crucified man, lying stone-cold-dead in a borrowed grave….
…a terrified band of women and men huddled behind locked doors, prayerfully waiting for Whatever’s Coming Next….

This is what God’s always been up to:  upsetting all our applecarts, messing up all our assumptions, fashioning something breath-taking out of next-to-nothing!

And, bringing it all closer to home, this is what God has been doing for years, here in our little corner of the vast Creation--our synod:   planting faith-communities with one foot in time and the other foot in eternity….establishing and sustaining congregations, each of which is a sign, foretaste and instrument of Christ’s in-breaking Reign over all things.     

If all our lives, put together, amount to little more than the thinnest slice of eternity….these last twelve years have been barely a blip on a radar screen…

….and yet, looking back over my two terms of serving as your bishop, I can scarcely count up all the ways God has been building bigger tables in our midst—with us, through us, sometimes even despite us!

God has been opening up fresh ways to welcome all believers—including our gay and lesbian siblings in Christ—not just to sit at God’s bigger table, but also to serve at that Table.

God has been stirring up in us a passion for passing on the faith, ever more winsomely, particularly with those in the first third of life.

God has been helping us see in the wider world how our Lord is building bigger tables through ventures like YAGM--Young Adults in Global Mission—a host of whom have come from our synod.

God has been deepening and enriching our relationships with table-mates in the Andhra Evangelical Lutheran Church of India, our companion synod.

God has been nudging us toward re-encountering our oldest neighbors, the first inhabitants of this good land, our beloved native neighbors.

Most of all, God has been building bigger tables through our 226 congregations and dozens of ELCA-related ministries—vehicles through which sins are forgiven, Baptismal water is poured out, soul-satisfying nourishment is served up:  God’s Word and sacraments and mission making all things new right in our midst.

All these thanksgivings—and countless more that we could add—stir not just our gratitude, but also our hope.

I can’t think of any reason why God would not finish in us, all that God has already begun in us.  

Especially this Pentecost weekend, as our synod calls a new bishop and a new vice president, we can confidently expect to see bigger tables being built until God’s New Day surely comes.

In the name of Jesus.  Amen.



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