Brad Sullivan
Proper 14, Year C
August 11, 2019
Emmanuel, Houston
Luke 12:32-40
Dance With the Demons
“Do not be afraid,
little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the
kingdom.” We live with quite a lot of
fear, don’t we? Fears of all kinds and
varieties. Economic insecurity, health issues.
Fear of loss. We have fears of violence, fears of natural disasters
destroying what we have. We have fears
of the other political party gaining power (whichever political party that is
for each of us). We also have fears of
not being good enough, worthy enough. Fears that someone might find out the
truth about us. We have fears of what
the world will be like for our children and grandchildren.
These fears keep us
striving against each other, trying to overcome each other, trying to make sure
that if the world is not going to be ok, at least those I love and I will be
ok. In the midst of these fears, Jesus
says, “Do not be afraid little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to
give you the kingdom.” It seems that our
fears are nothing new, but they are the same fears which have been with
humanity forever, and Jesus repeats what God has said throughout scripture, “Do
not be afraid.” Rather than overcome
each other, let go of your fears and live in love toward each other. “Sell your possessions, and give alms. Make
purses for yourselves that do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven,
where no thief comes near and no moth destroys. For where your treasure is,
there your heart will be also.”
Live in love with
each other, and trust each other. For
economic security, trust not only in yourself but also in those your love, your
community and neighbors. Give to others
in their time of need, trusting that they will give to you in your time of
need. Rather than overcoming each other, we live for and with each other. That is life in the kingdom of God, and it is
the Father’s good pleasure to give us the kingdom.
Lutheran Pastor
David Lose writes:
I think the call – or at least one of the primary calls – of the church
today is to become a place where people are so rooted in the promise of God’s
good pleasure, reminded of their identity as God’s beloved children, and
affirmed in their inherent self-worth and dignity, that they can, indeed, see
all those around them as similarly beloved and deserving of self-worth,
dignity, and God’s good pleasure. The question for a Christian..[is] discovering
that as we give ourselves away in relationship and service we find a deeper
sense of self than we’d imagined possible. We are born for community and find a
sense of self and meaning and purpose as we trust God’s promises and give
ourselves away in love.”
Give ourselves away
in love. That’s not an easy thing to do
when we’re afraid of ourselves and those around us. Our inner demons often keep us from giving
ourselves away in love. A friend of
mine, Steve White, recently wrote, “Perhaps it isn’t actually about overcoming
all your inner demons. Maybe it’s about
learning how to dance with them.” That
speaks to me not only of the fears we have about ourselves, but also the fears
we have about each other. What if we
don’t need to fight against and overcome our inner demons, but rather learn to
dance with them, to accept them as a part of who we are. What if we also don’t need to fight against
and overcome each other, but rather learn to dance with each other, to give
ourselves away in love, to offer ourselves daily to God and join with each
other in God’s divine dance, turning even our scars into something
beautiful. That’s life in God’s kingdom,
and it is the Father’s good pleasure to give us the kingdom.
Fearing each other,
we end up scattered and fragmented, continually knowing that we don’t
belong. We have folks who have felt like
they can’t or don’t belong to the church because of their political
beliefs. I know I’ve made people feel
this way at times, as have other church leaders, church members, and
congregations. The thing about our
political views is, most people I know, on both sides of the political spectrum
want the same thing: a just society which brings about the best way of life for
the most number of people. Their
difference is simply the ways and the roles they believe the government should
have in bringing about a just society.
They both have their religious beliefs tied up into that, and folks on
both sides of the aisle believe in Jesus’ teachings about the kingdom of
God.
Here’s the
secret: The government is not how Jesus calls us to bring about God’s kingdom, even though it is the tool
some would use to try. God’s kingdom is
given through God in partnership with us, with our living into God’s kingdom,
and there is room in God’s kingdom for all of us. All of us belong in God’s kingdom, and so we
need not overcome each other, but learn to dance with each other, to give
ourselves away in love.
Rather than fearing
that the other side may win, can we at least realize the while the other side
may be wrong, it is still striving for the best system for the good of the most
people? Can we accept the consequences
if it turns out our fears were right? Can
we trust in each other, rather than feeling threatened by each other? Cane felt threatened by Abel, and so he
killed him. We hear of folks and have
experience feeling threatened by each other and each others’ beliefs, so we
attack each other verbally, sometimes physically, deriding each other, feeling
that they want to destroy all that is good in our society, our country, and our
world.
"Be dressed for
action and have your lamps lit,” Jesus taught, so that he will find you not
asleep, but alert and ready. Our fears
and the ways we seek to overcome each other, feeling threatened by each other,
are ways that we fall asleep. We fall
asleep to God’s kingdom and are alert only to our fears, to our inner
demons. We all have inner demons. Our families have inner demons. The church has inner demons. Our cities, our state, and our nation have
inner demons. Keeping alert, staying
awake and being alert is about not overcoming and striving against our inner
demons and each other, but rather learning to dance together.
If we learn to dance
together, we may find that we are not asleep when the master of the house or
the thief comes. Whenever Jesus shows up
in our lives (and it happens all the time), how wonderful if he finds us not
trying to overcome each other, but instead learning to dance with each other,
giving ourselves away in love. Over
time, we learn how each other moves and thinks.
We still step on each others’ toes, but we laugh about it.
Living into God’s
kingdom, us giving of our abundance when folks are in need, receiving from
others’ abundance when we are in need; living in that kingdom, we can live without
fear of the other. We can offer
ourselves in love, and learn to dance together.
“Do not be afraid, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure
to give you the kingdom.”
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