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A Welcoming Peace
Isaiah 11:1-9
Douglas S. Long
North Raleigh United Church, UCC
December 5, 2004
I received an email this week… (I received a LOT of emails
this week) but this one caught my eye. It’s funny how things can catch your
attention sometimes when you’ve never looked twice at them before. The email
said…
Doctor Formulated H-G-H (H/uman-G/rowth-H/ormone)
The health discovery that actually reverses aging while burning fat, without dieting or exercise!
- Enhance bedroom performance
- Remove wrinkles
- Restore hair color and growth
100% Satisfaction Guaranteed!
The email message then
substantiated its legitimacy by proudly exclaiming…
As seen on NBC and CBS!
Sometimes I wonder why I even pre-publish a sermon topic or
title. I know a few ministers who publish their sermon topics a year in
advance. Seriously… and that would probably make Saturday nights less stressful
but, really, how relevant can a topic be that is prepared a year out?
So earlier this week I stated my sermon title would be “Peace
in Fearful Times.”
…but by the time I got around to putting something on paper,
I didn’t want to preach about fear.
But I do want to preach about peace.
It is the Second Sunday in Advent… and we wait in Peace.
Well, sort of… I mean, there is that war thing going on…
But I’m going to assume you know by now that I believe that
that war is immoral, un-Christlike, wrong headed and anything but what God
would condone. If you’re still not clear where I am on that score, catch me
privately when I can be more blunt.
Well, OK, I’ll say a little more…
The prophet Isaiah spoke of a time, dreamed of a time when
war would be no more. As a country we seem to have made peace with the idea
that we are involved in a war that will never end.
That is true, of course, if we try to address it primarily
through violence. Violence always breeds more violence. …and for every foreign
father we violently eliminate, the sons and daughters will rise up against us.
History records that Abraham Lincoln said it well one day in
a meeting of his Cabinet.
Congressman Thaddeus Stevens, a bitter man from
Massachusetts, on the
heels of the War between the States …Thaddeus Stevens shared the sentiment in
the North to just crush the South after the War was over. When Mr. Lincoln was
advocating in a particular Cabinet meeting binding up the wounds of the nation,
and ideas such as forgiveness, and reconciliation, Thaddeus Stevens pounded the
table and said, "Mr. Lincoln! I think enemies ought to be destroyed!"
To which Mr. Lincoln is said to have quietly responded,
"Mr. Stevens, do not I destroy my enemy when I make him
my friend?"
I’m not naïve enough to think we can simply make terrorists
our friends. But neither am I naïve enough to believe that we are going to end
terrorism through violence.
What the world needs... is peace. …and you can’t force
peace.
Peace occurs in the context of respect and… welcome.
What the world needs …is more welcome.
I remember so well a brief event that happened years ago…
let’s see, it was 1990… 14 years ago. Denise and I were in rural Mexico, working
as International partners with Habitat for Humanity… and a small band of three
campesinos, peasant folk, two men and a woman (none of whom was even close to 5
feet tall) approached us from a village several miles down the mountainous
road. We were outside in the street. We invited them in, offered them a drink
and sat with them for a while in the sparsely furnished room that was half the
house we lived in there. (We had four
chairs. One of us sat on the bed.)
What I remember most was that they were incredulous.
“We have never been invited into a Gringo’s home before,”
they said.
Do you remember that, Denise?
That simple welcome transformed our relationship.
From that day on they were our friends… merely because we
had sincerely welcomed them.
Welcome, you know, I assume, is a hot topic these days.
The UCC developed a commercial stating it welcomed all
people… and NBC and CBS refused to run it. Too controversial. If you welcome
all people, they reasoned, it means you must welcome gay and lesbian persons
(Well, actually that’s true.)
And if you truly welcome them, they deduced, it must mean
you accept them equally…
(Well, yeah…)
And if you truly accept them equally, it must mean you’d be
willing to treat them equally, to offer them all the rights of the Church…
(Uh-huh.)
…which means you’d be willing to offer sanctioned loving
relationships, even marriage.
(Of course!)
…though the commercial doesn’t say any of that, it doesn’t
say anything except we welcome everyone… What NBC has deduced is all very true.
I’m actually amazed that the networks have been able to see
the connection… and that they have further understood that the only way to
truly counter the message of welcome is to flatly say… “but, you see, you’re
not really welcome.”
Real welcome, radical welcome threatens the status quo.
In the holy mountain of the Lord, in the vision of peace
that Isaiah proclaims the Christ will usher in…
The wolf might lie down with the lamb, but the peacock’s not
gonna have any part of it.
Some claim the advertisement implies other churches, non-UCC
churches, do not welcome all people. Truth is, we know all UCC churches do not
welcome all people. The further truth is we know we, you and me, do not always
welcome all people.
Alison Jones did a follow up radio story of NRUC’s eventual
reception into the ENCA but couldn’t get NPR to buy it. Until now… Now, airing
a story about division within the denomination that welcomes all… …. well,
suddenly that’s a juicy story.
And that story of exclusion, within the UCC, played on
National Public Radio this morning.
One person emailed me and said they felt the UCC was trying
to proselytize… trying to steal members from other denominations. I emailed
back and explained that the intent of the ad was not to proselytize but to
target persons who felt excluded by the Church.
So, let me ask you a question.
Have you ever been rejected by the church?
I have.
…but my rejection was about theological differences.
There are plenty of people who have been rejected because of
who they are… rejected because of who God fashioned them to be…
not rejected merely because of what they believe (that’s the kind of rejection
I’ve experienced)… but rejected because of their skin color, their gender
(women are not equal to men in many churches)…
…And, clearly, people are routinely rejected for their
sexual orientation.
Just this week… a gifted United Methodist minister was
defrocked because she chose to not deny who she is.
And that, my friends… to defrock her, to strip her of her
clergy credentials… that , my friends, is a sin, against God… by the Church.
She wasn’t denied entrance. She got thrown out!
I’d wager there are hundreds of people within a few miles of
us right now who feel that the Institutional Church has excluded them. …because
of their past lives, or their present choices, or their intellectual honesty.
And if we are who we say we are… we’d surely welcome them
here.
We'd share with them, and each other, in this Advent season, the wonderful vision of Isaiah, which the Church has adopted as a mandate for following the Christ.
Here it again…
All Nature, all creation is frolicking in the peaceable Kingdom that ensues.
Listen to this welcoming vision:
(From Eugene
Peterson’s The Message…)
Isaiah 11:
6 The wolf will romp with the lamb, the leopard sleep with the kid. Calf and lion
will eat from the same trough, and a little child will tend them. 7 Cow and bear
will graze the same pasture, their calves and cubs grow up together, and the
lion eat straw like the ox. 8 The nursing child will crawl over rattlesnake dens,
the toddler stick his hand down the hole of a serpent. 9 Neither animal nor human
will hurt or kill on my holy mountain. The whole earth will be brimming with knowing
God-Alive, a living knowledge of God ocean-deep, ocean-wide.
The Peaceable Kingdom… Will the human race join in?
Joyce
Hollyday, a UCC minister based in Atlanta but also working at a UCC church in
Asheville, is one of the many who has responded to the controversy around the UCC
commercial.
Her piece ran a couple of days ago in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Here is an
excerpt from it:
In this religious season of Advent, as we await and prepare for the celebration of
Jesus’ birth, we remember that his earthly journey took him from a feeding
trough to a cross; … Jesus called his followers to simplicity and surrender,
inviting them to abandon arrogant and violent ways, boldly confronting the
status quo that enforced the power and economic arrangements of his day. He
told them that whenever they fed, or clothed, or visited one of the "least
of these" in the world’s eyes—the hungry, the sick, the prisoners—they
showed that compassion to him. He proclaimed peacemakers "blessed"
and exhorted his followers, "Love your enemies and pray for those who
persecute you." He formed around himself a community of radical inclusion
and compassion, welcoming in particular the people who were marginalized and
stigmatized by his society: the leprous and the lame, blind beggars, despised
women, hated foreigners.
Some of us Christians in America don’t see how you can follow Jesus and exclude some
of God’s children from the circle of grace. We don’t understand how you can
care for the poor and gut the programs that sustain them. … We don’t know how you
can love your enemies and bomb them. … For us, following Jesus means we are
called to mirror his compassion for the poor, his inclusion of the
marginalized, his pursuit of peace, and his proclamations of justice. Those of
us in the United Church of Christ would like to spread that message.
You may hear that as a defense.
I hear it as a challenge.
Am I following this radical Christ today?
Are we?
How do we live our “Welcome!”
Welcome… really, welcome. Come and be well.
- You are grieving…welcome.
- You are carefree… welcome.
- You are
economically strapped… welcome.
- You are wealthy…
welcome (and let me introduce you to our assistant treasurer!)
- You’ve heard a
message from some church, somewhere sometime that you aren’t good enough…
welcome.
- You’ve never heard
such a message… welcome.
Come and be well.
- You are young, older, white, a person of color, highly educated, self-taught, gay, straight,
curvy,
…Welcome.
We are on a journey
of community we’d like for all to join.
…and we say, to each
other and to all who would come along… welcome.
Amen.
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