Brad Sullivan
Proper 25, Year B
October 28, 2018
Emmanuel, Houston
Mark 10:46-52
Isaiah 2:2-4
Out of Anger, Hatred, and Killing, “Let There Be Light”
“In the beginning, when God created the heavens and the
earth, the earth was a formless void and darkness covered the face of the
deep…Then God said, ‘Let there be light,’ and there was light.” (Genesis 1:1-3) Bartimaeus, a man who was blind called to
Jesus to have mercy on him, and when Jesus asked what he wanted, he said, “My
teacher, let me see again.” Jesus said,
“Go; your faith has made you well,” and immediately Bartimaeus could see. Where there had been a formless void and
darkness for Bartimaeus, Jesus spoke, and there was light.
It is no stretch to draw a connection between the light at
the beginning of creation and the restoration of sight for Bartimaeus, because there
was so much more going on with Bartimaeus than one man getting to see
again. The same voice that said, “Let
there be light,” said to Bartimaeus, “Go; your faith has made you well.” God was once again bringing light into the
darkness.
You might think that God would get tired of saying “let
there be light” over and over again in the midst of our darkness, but it seems that
in God’s love, God never tires of bringing light into the formless void of our
darkness. Anger, hatred, killing. “Let there be light,” God says. “Let there be light.” The healing of Bartimaeus was a sign, a
reminder that God is always taking the darkness of the world upon himself and
bringing light and healing to this broken world.
I’m guessing that most people who witnessed Bartimaeus’
healing didn’t think to themselves, “Oh, God is restoring light into the void
and darkness of humanity’s sin.” Most
probably just thought, “Cool, Barty can see again,” but restoration and healing
of creation is what was really going on in the healing of Bartimaeus, and the
really cool thing about Bartimaeus is, he got to be a part of Jesus healing and
restoring creation. He got to be a part
of Jesus’ light casting out darkness.
Now, Bartimaeus didn’t do anything great. All he did was ask Jesus for help, but
because he did, Jesus got to show that the light of God has not left the world
in darkness, but rather God’s light is always with us in this world casting out
darkness for those who wish to see.
We are here worshipping in a Jewish Synagogue because after
Hurricane Harvey flooded our church, the Rabbi and people of Temple Sinai
offered their sacred space for us to worship in on Sundays. They were the light in our darkness, and as
with Bartimaeus, there was and is now something so much bigger going on than a
small Christian community getting a place to gather for worship. In our communities coming together, God is working
to heal his world. In our communities
sharing Temple Sinai’s house of worship, God is casting out the darkness of anger,
hatred, and killing.
Now, there was no anger, hatred,
and killing between Emmanuel and Temple Sinai, but as we saw yesterday in Pittsburg,
there is still plenty of anger and hatred towards and killing of the people of
Israel. People at the Tree of Life
Synagogue in Pittsburg were gathered yesterday for a Shabbat service, for
Sabbath rest and peace, and a man walked in and killed 11 people simply because
he hated wanted to kill Jews. The
darkness of anti-Semitism, that anger, hatred, and killing is tragically still
with us.
So, when I say we are a part of something so much bigger
than ourselves by gathering here for worship at Temple Sinai, I mean we are a
part of God casting out the darkness of anti-Semitism, of anger, hatred, and
violence of all kinds. By being here, we
are a part of God’s continuing story of taking the formless void and darkness
of humanity’s anger, hatred, and violence, and saying to that darkness, “Let
there be light.”
Now, like Bartimaeus, we haven’t done anything. All the work was done by a Jewish rabbi and
her congregation saying, “Come, worship, let our house be your house.” All we did was say, “yes please, thank you,”
and God said, “Let there be light.”
That is the story we are a part of by being here. That is the story we get to tell because we
are here. We get to be a part of and
tell the story of God healing creation.
I hope we don’t miss that. I hope
we don’t take this time gathering for worship in this sacred and holy place and
simply think, “cool, we got a place to worship.” There is so much more going on here than just
having a place to gather on Sundays. Jesus
said his followers would be kicked out of the synagogues, and yet here we
are. Peace and wholeness in creation is
being restored.
In Isaiah 2:2-4, we here a vision of peace, of peace in
Jerusalem and peace in the world.
In days to come the mountain of the
Lord’s house shall be established as the highest of the mountains, and shall be
raised above the hills; all the nations shall stream to it. Many peoples shall come and say, ‘Come, let
us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob; that he
may teach us his ways and that we may walk in his paths.’ For out of Zion shall go forth instruction,
and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem. He shall judge between the nations,
and shall arbitrate for many peoples; they shall beat their swords into
ploughshares, and their spears into pruning-hooks; nation shall not lift up
sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more. (Isaiah 2:2-4)
That is the story we get to be a part of by worshipping here
on Sundays, by accepting Temple Sinai’s offer for light in our darkness. People need to hear this story. It’s a story worth telling because it is part
of a story that is so much bigger than we.
Like Bartimaeus’ story was so much bigger than just him receiving his
sight, our being here is part of God’s story of constantly saying, “Let there
be light,” to the formless void and darkness of humanity’s anger, hatred, and
killing. In the wake of 11 deaths at
Tree of Life Synagogue, tell this story.
Tell the story of Emmanuel at Sinai, the story of this congregation
opening up their hearts to us, the story of God saying, “Let there be
light.”
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