Western Minnesota Steam Threshers Reunion
September 3, 2017/Rollag, Minnesota
Our gospel
text is Luke 6:38: [Jesus said]
“Give, and it will be given to you. A good measure, pressed down, shaken
together, running over, will be put into your lap; for the measure you give
will be the measure you get back.”
In the name
of Jesus. Amen.
The other
day I received an email from a friend that started out like this:
“It is hardly an exaggeration to say that while Texas is underwater, Montana has gone up in flames. While 50 inches of rain fall in Texas, Montana is experiencing record drought, heat and high winds, all of which combine to make it a record fire season….Thousands of people are being evacuated in the west, as fires sweep through the mountains. And in the east, range fires have consumed anything the cattle might eat….Fire danger in [Montana] ranges from Severe to Exceptional. Last night lightning started 40 new fires….Smoke is everywhere, even hundreds of miles from active fire. There are severe health warnings about any kind of exertion outside, even for healthy people.” (email from Bishop Jessica Crist, Montana Synod ELCA)
Wow!
What a
powerful reminder that, as Houston and Hurricane Harvey have captured almost
all of our attention…other disasters in far-flung corners of the world also are
playing out…whether we’re talking drought and wildfires in the western United
States…or the devastating flooding in the Bihar state of India, half a world
away!
At any
moment somewhere persons are suffering in this world…somewhere, someone is
beset by forces that diminish life and stifle hope….somewhere people are hurting
right now…eking out a hand-to-mouth existence, famished by scarcity.
And it’s
always been that way.
The pages of
the Bible make that clear. One of the reasons
why the Bible “rings true” is that it consistently portrays all the hard edges
of life as we know it. The Bible
sugar-coats nothing. The Bible supports
the notion that life is “nasty, brutish and short”—anything but a bed of roses.
So the
children of Israel in the Old Testament endure harsh slavery in Egypt for
generations…
…And the Jews
whom we meet in the four gospels labor under the harsh thumb of Roman
occupation troops….
…And the
earliest generation of Christians, the first century church draws into its
orbit some of the poorest of the poor.
Our Bible
does nothing to hide those sobering facts.
And why is
that? Why is this framework of scarcity
so evident in our Holy Book?
It’s about
more than being “real” or “true to life.”
The Bible
puts on full display all the things persons hope for and wish they had….so that
we can see how God deals with this predicament, how God reverses the fortunes
of folks “living on the edge.”
Did you hear
that red thread, coming through loud and clear in the scripture lessons that
were just read?
There is a
lushness, a richness, a lavishness, to the way God bestows his gifts. God doesn’t dole out anything sparingly. One adjective that’s never used to describe
God is “stingy.”
Instead God is
always getting carried away—continually giving gifts with a full heart and an
open hand and an abundance that leaves us breathless.
So, in the 8th
chapter of Deuteronomy, Moses really overdoes it as he describes the future God
has in store for the wandering Israelites after their escape from Egyptian
slavery.
Standing on
the border into the Promised Land, Moses rhapsodizes about a landscape with
flowing streams, with springs and underground waters welling up in valleys and
hills, 8a land of wheat and
barley, of vines and fig trees and pomegranates, a land of olive trees and
honey, 9a land where [God’s
people will] eat bread without scarcity, …[and] will lack nothing….
And then the
singer of Psalm 103 quickly jumps in, babbling on about the Lord whose mercy
and grace spills over, “abounding in steadfast love” with generous doses of
forgiveness that drives sin away, “as far as the east is from the west….”
And then St.
Paul has to chime in, shining his apostolic spotlight on the amazing Macedonian
Christians--poor as church mice!--but recklessly giving, way beyond their means,
for the relief of the beleaguered saints in Jerusalem…
And finally our
Lord Jesus himself, in his Sermon on the Plain in Luke 6, describes God’s life
overflowing in terms of a trip to the local granary where your bushel-basket is
“super-sized” to-the-max…where newly-harvested grain is poured out generously, “a
good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, [and plopped down,
right] into your lap.”
When it
comes to our God, the God of Good Friday and Easter, the Lord of the Cross and
the Empty Tomb, the Creator of all our yesterdays and tomorrows….the scarcity
that pinches us is always being overcome by bountiful generosity.
It’s a holy
mess when God gets into the act, giving us all good gifts. Watch out!
Have your scoop shovel, broom and
dustpan handy--for when God gives gifts, there’s a lot of “spillage” needing to
be cleaned up!
That’s because God knows only one way
to give gifts: abundantly, lavishly,
overflowingly…
So, my
friends, when you take your seat, with your morning coffeeshop crew and effortlessly
join in their “ain’t it awful” chorus…
When you
find yourself sighing and shrugging your shoulders, because of headlines that
seem so bereft of good news…
When signs
of danger, wickedness or scarcity capture your attention, focusing your gaze on
storms like Hurricane Harvey, or political turmoil in Washington, or declining rural
populations, or stagnant wages, or low
commodity prices, scarce dollars, receding hope….
Remember then
that scarcity isn’t an illusion—not one bit.
Deprivation, abject poverty, utter emptiness—that’s our lot in life,
apart from God’s amazing grace in Jesus Christ.
Scarcity is
real.
But it is never
our destiny.
In God’s new
creation—for which we ache with longing!—scarcity will be a thing of the
past—forever.
God allows
our cup to become empty occasionally—just so God can fill it up again with life
overflowing….only so that God can draw us ever deeper into the rhythm of living
in anticipation of the new creation God is already bring forth, through the
life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
When the bad
news of this world becomes overwhelming...let us see it for what it really
is: the fading echo of a creaky, dying
world—a tired old age that is passing away.
Scarcity,
which can seem so real!--has no ultimate claim upon you.
Deprivation is not your destiny.
The biblical
story points us toward anything but a life of pinched, stingy scarcity. The biblical writers go nuts trying to
describe the only way God knows how to give.
And then
things always get out of hand…because God’s way of giving is like a river overflowing
its banks, gifts piled upon gifts, life abundant.
And what’s even
better: God’s life overflowing doesn’t
stop with us.
No: God’s abundance is intended to flow not just to us, but through us to others.
We’re more like conduits than holding tanks when it comes
to receiving God’s goodness—which is wonderful news to folks in Houston and
Montana and India…and a whole lot closer to home as well!
Which makes
a guy wonder what it might look like if people like us started to resist all
the ways we’re tempted to fixate on the dark side of life?
What would happen
if you and I imagined ourselves infiltrating our homes and faith-communities townships
and neighborhoods with another word: the
great good news about God’s astounding and utterly gratuitous abundance in
Jesus Christ?
What would result
if we routinely obsessed over how God always gets a kick out of giving gifts--with
a full heart, an open hand and a generosity that sweeps us up in its tide?
What if…we
dreamed and deliberated and decided and lived as though wherever we are,
whoever we are, we have all that we need in order to do God’s work?
What if we were
to bet the whole farm on the fact that all of God’s gifts to us come
“super-sized,” like that bushel basket of grain Jesus described for us: “a
good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, [right] in your
lap?”
In the name
of Jesus. Amen.
Thank you for a message of hope and abundance!
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