Christ the King,
Moorhead
September 7
& 10, 2014
Rally
Day/Installation of Pr. Aaron Suomala Folkerds
Genesis 37:1-28
and Matthew 28:20
This
week, as I was preparing my sermon, I think I finally figured out something about
Jesus--about what makes Jesus “tick.”
It is as if Jesus
has deep inside himself a kind of “homing device”….a microchip in
his brain—or is it his heart?—…a microchip that causes Jesus to be drawn toward
persons who are “left out,” avoided, for whatever reason “on the outside
looking in.”
You
can open up any of the four gospels, and almost wherever you look….you’ll find
Jesus making a beeline toward someone whom we’d call an outsider.
Jesus
was attracted to folks on the edges, on the outs, alone and abandoned….for
whatever reason.
So
sometimes Jesus’ homing signal draws him toward sick people, especially invalids
whose illness separates them from the community….with diseases like leprosy.
Other
times Jesus seems to be attracted to persons who are discriminated against,
like the Samaritans with whom Jews like Jesus usually had no dealings.
Other
times Jesus’ homing signal pointed him toward people who were caught in illicit
lines of work or risky lifestyles…or people who had made bad decisions…prostitutes,
tax collectors, rabble-rousers of one sort or another.
It’s
as if something inside of him compelled Jesus to seek out, come alongside of
and stand with folks who—for whatever reasons—were left out by others.
So,
as today’s worship theme proclaims: Even when you're left out, Jesus loves you.
Even
when you’re left out (for whatever reason or for no reason in particular),
Jesus loves you, because it’s as if Jesus has inside of him a “homing signal”
that drives him to seek out those
who’ve been left out.
And
this isn’t just Jesus’s “thing,” either!
This is God’s thing,
and it’s always been God’s thing….to
be drawn toward outsiders. We see this
not only in the gospels and the entire New Testament….but we witness this
reality all the way back to the beginning of the Bible, in the Old Testament
book of Genesis.
In
our lesson for today, we meet Joseph, the 11th son of the patriarch Jacob’s twelve sons…..and
Joseph is in a world of hurt.
Here
in Genesis 37, Joseph is stuck in a hole in the desert, a pit he can’t get out
of….and as Joseph languishes in that scary place he hears his ten older
brothers arguing among themselves…..as they try to decide whether they should just
flat out kill him, or sell him to human traffickers, or just let nature takes
it course, letting him rot in that pit.
Talk
about being an outsider! Joseph is
about as “left out” as anyone ever could be!
This
amazing saga of Joseph illustrates the astounding, surprising realism of the
Bible. The Good Book never presents to
us a slick, sanitized, detached view of the human condition.
No
the Bible tells it like it is. The
Bible is God’s book—true enough!—but it’s a book that’s also literally covered
with fingerprints…the very human
fingerprints of the living, breathing human beings God inspired to preserve
these stories for future generations.
And
the Bible, in its cold and sober realism, doesn’t gloss over the ugly stuff,
doesn’t round off the sharp edges of life.
The Bible exposes us in all our
waywardness, all our God-forsakenness, all our lostness!
So
just how did Joseph wind up in that pit in the desert?
One
honest answer would be that this is where parental favoritism, personal
arrogance, and murderous envy all lead—all of those things, within a highly
dysfunctional family system!
· For Joseph was,
you see, the favorite son of his father Jacob’s favorite wife, Rachel.
· And Joseph seems
to have let his favored status go to his head.
· And, also, not
surprisingly Joseph’s ten older brothers harbored an envy toward him that
seriously led them to consider fratricide!
And
that’s just the start of a saga about Joseph that occupies another whole 10
chapters in Genesis (a saga that I encourage you to read when you get the
chance!)
Throughout
that long, twisting, turning tale….Joseph is time and again “on the outside
looking in,” rescued and abandoned, rescued and abandoned….until finally in
Egypt—far away from his home and family—Joseph is promoted from a dungeon to a
castle, from being a prisoner to becoming prime minister, Pharaoh’s right-hand
man.
If
ever someone tasted what it was like to be “left out” and left behind in the
biblical story, it was Joseph…..but that left-outness was never the “end of the
story for him.” For Someone else was
always there for Joseph. Someone
(Someone with a capital “S”)…Someone else was always hot on his trail, out
ahead of him, guiding Joseph’s story to an amazing, transforming conclusion
that you can read about in Genesis chapter 50.
What’s
maybe most striking about this 11-chapter novella tucked within the book of
Genesis is that God is always at work (though hardly ever mentioned in the
narrative itself)…and that Joseph perceives and names God’s loving, saving
presence only at the end of the story.
And
here, I think is where Joseph’s story
and our stories intersect and interpret each other.
For
we, too, live out our lives often unmindful of the fact that God is walking
with us every step of the way. We—even
people of faith like us—can, so easily live out our days as if we were all
alone, as if God were not woven into every step of our journey, as close to us
continually as the next breath that we take.
And
when we do become aware of God’s presence and God’s love---isn’t it often only
at the end of a chapter in our life….only as we stop, listen and look back over
where we have been….does it become apparent that we were never “left out,”
never truly alone, but that God was alongside us always, walking with us every
step of the way?
So,
in Genesis 50 Joseph is finally reconciled to his treacherous brothers. Joseph, who has indeed (just as his
youthful dreams predicted!) risen in rank to the second place of authority in
the Kingdom of Egypt….Joseph finally reveals himself to his brothers, not in a
spirit of revenge but with a heart full of reconciliation….because Joseph has
caught wind of what was really happening all along: “Joseph
said to [his brothers], ‘Do not be afraid! Am I in the place of God? Even
though you intended to do harm to me, God intended it for good, in order to
preserve a numerous people, as he is doing today.” (Genesis 50:19-20)
Just
as Joseph needed the perspective that only time and reflection can provide, we
too are often most aware of God’s abiding, loving presence only when we look
carefully in the rear-view mirror of our lives….when it dawns on us that in the
times of life when we felt most alone, most left out, God was still there,
always present….and God will always be there, right beside us.
And
here’s where you come in Pastor Aaron (I bet you were wondering if I’d ever get
around to you!).
You
have been called and today you are installed to be part of the pastoral team of
Christ the King, along with Pastor Matt and your other staff colleagues.
That
means, as you well know, all sorts of things….but for now let me draw attention
to these privileges that are yours.
· You are here to
remind these dear people that even when they feel left out, Jesus still loves
them—to do that reminding in a host of ways and under an array of
circumstances.
· You have great
material to work with in this regard, because it will be your privilege to
crack open the Word of God, time and again.
You don’t have to make stuff up, Aaron….all you need to do is hunker down
behind this Word of Jesus who has a sort of “homing device” inside him that
draws him, like iron filings to a magnet, draws him toward down and outers and
anyone who has messed up badly enough to wonder whether God is still in the
equation.
· You are here to
let both the divine inspiration and the deeply human, realistic expression of
the Bible come to light—always focused on Jesus, who is at the center of it
all.
And
perhaps most intriguingly, most invitingly for a man of your gifts and
interests in listening to people and guiding them toward a richer life….you are
here to help people detect the stirrings of God within their seemingly
earth-bound lives. You are called to
help them look back, in the rear-view mirror of their lives to perceive all the
ways that just when they thought they were most alone, Someone with a capital
“S” was always there, always guiding, always saving, always opening up a gracious
future in Jesus Christ our Lord and Savior.
Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment