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March 22, 2020:  Fourth Sunday in Lent, Pastor Joe Britton, preaching

3/22/2020

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​22 March 2020
Pastor Joe Britton
St. Michael’s Church
IV Lent
 
“As Jesus walked along, he saw a man blind from birth.” (John 9)
 
PART I
 
            We return to scripture over and over again, because depending upon the circumstance, it always has something new and different to say to us.
            So it should come as no surprise, given our current situation of isolation and distance from one another, that in today’s gospel of the healing of the man born blind, the theme of relationship jumps out.
            We’re reading the story, which is quite lengthy, in four episodes, by way of highlighting the layering of relationship and healing that takes place within it. So in this first segment, what has happened so far is this: Jesus has come upon what we might now call a dysfunctional family system. There is a man who has been blind from birth, who is saddled with a sense of guilt that either he or his parents must have sinned, for him to have been born with this condition.
            Meanwhile the parents, as we shall see, have effectively disowned their son, and want nothing to do with him. As a result, he has been reduced to begging in the streets to survive. His status as a beggar also indicates that he is alienated from the community, for it too has washed its hands of responsibility to him.
            So it is into this fragmented human situation that Jesus comes, announcing that despite its apparent hopelessness, out of it will be revealed the works of God. From separation and alienation, something new is going to come that will not just reconcile the all-too human situation of familial estrangement, but redefine those very relationships in light of Jesus’ presence within them.
            And so what happens first? Quite simply, Jesus heals the man of his blindness, which is not only a physical restoration of sight but also a spiritual release from his debilitating sense of guilt. But then, rather than making a big deal of it—Jesus just quietly slips away to let the people to sort out for themselves what happened. And needless to say, confusion reigns—in fact, the degree of the man’s continuing alienation from the community is shown by how the people disagree whether he is even the same person. So let’s go back to the story and hear what happens next … 
           
PART II          
 
            In this second episode, the people have brought the man before the Pharisees, asking for their reading on what has happened. But now, yet a further degree of alienation is brought to light: focusing on the requirements of the Sabbath, the Pharisees are themselves blinded to the power of God that has been at work in their midst: they are alienated from the very God they think they serve.
            So uncertain of what to make of it all, they put the question back to the man himself: What do you say? And he responds, somewhat innocently, that he thinks Jesus is a prophet—that is, someone who is able to bring the ways of God and the needs of the community together in a single thought.
            Now, you might expect that the response to such a provocative assertion would be, “Well, then, what is his meaning?” But instead, the controversy only deepens as the Pharisees lapse into disagreement, and the people decide to draw the man’s parents into the inquiry. Let’s listen in …
 
PART III.
 
            So instead of sticking up for their son, the parents wash their hands of the whole situation, and leave their son to fend for himself—as they have always done. The man tries to reason with the now restive crowd, explaining yet again how it was that he was healed.
            But they now put themselves into the same boat as the Pharisees. The god they know, is the god of Moses—and to them that is a closed system that admits no change. And so, they demonstrate their own alienation from the dynamic power of God, by denying its legitimacy. The man tries to point out, that if Jesus were not of God, then he could not do what he does. But the people merely try to reassert the same old spiritual alienation from which the man has been healed, accusing him yet again of having been born in sin, and they drive him away …
 
PART IV.
 
            Jesus, having let the consequences of the people’s alienation play themselves out, returns to find the man whom he has healed. It’s a very touching moment, not unlike other crowd scenes where, when all the others have gone, Jesus is left with one individual: the fearful woman caught in adultery, or the one leper out of ten who returned to give thanks for being cured.
            The healing that Jesus has worked in the man was to reveal that where he thought he was spiritually isolated by guilt, he has been made free; and where he could not see because of physical impairment, he has been made whole. Jesus has in other words turned his world upside down, and it turns out that inside of it, Jesus has revealed to him another world in which isolation is replaced by relationship, loneliness is overcome by community, and self-reliance is transformed into interdependence. The man is now poised, having been healed himself (having been given this new vision) to work those larger miracles of healing within his family and community.
            So the meaning of this healing story, as I read it today, is to recall for us the multiple layers of relationship by which we in fact all live, and to remind us of the power we have be agents of reconciliation. At a time when we are all too forcefully reminded of the private, individual dimension of our lives, it is good to be prompted to remember that in Christ, we do not live in isolated huts, but instead inhabit a vast terrain that is the life Christ shares with us, because it is also the life he shares with God, where he gathers us all into one human community.
            Let me leave you with an image to ponder: while most of us are closed in at home for the next days and perhaps weeks, it would be a healing thing for us to do, to call to mind the immense desert landscape in which we live, thinking of it as a metaphor for the spaciousness and grace of the life into which God invites us to live together in Jesus.      
            We have, for years now, been told that we must protect our culture from the outsider; that it is right to put ourselves first; that we have no need of the other; that division and anger are to be cultivated rather than remedied and overcome. As a Christian community, however, we live by a fundamentally alternative vision: a conviction that in Christ, God has cleared a place where we come fully to know who we are individually, only by knowing fully who we are as a human family.
            If this is a time of rediscovering that fundamental truth—that we are all one—then perhaps these days will have been worth the price, for they will be in their own right, a great awakening of the Spirit.
              
At the announcements:
 
Lockdown
Br. Richard Hendrick, OFM Cap
 
Yes there is fear.
Yes there is isolation.
Yes there is panic buying.
Yes there is sickness.
Yes there is even death.
 
But,
They say that in Wuhan after so many years of noise
You can hear the birds again.
They say that after just a few weeks of quiet
The sky is no longer thick with fumes
But blue and grey and clear.
 
They say that in the streets of Assisi
People are singing to each other
across the empty squares,
keeping their windows open
so that those who are alone
may hear the sounds of family around them.
 
They say that a hotel in the West of Ireland
Is offering free meals and delivery to the housebound.
Today a young woman I know
is busy spreading fliers with her number
through the neighbourhood
So that the elders may have someone to call on.
 
All over the world people are slowing down and reflecting
All over the world people are looking at their neighbours in a new way
All over the world people are waking up to a new reality
To how big we really are.
To how little control we really have.
To what really matters.
To Love.
 
So we pray and we remember that
Yes there is fear.
But there does not have to be hate.
 
Yes there is isolation.
But there does not have to be loneliness.
 
Yes there is panic buying.
But there does not have to be meanness.
 
Yes there is sickness.
But there does not have to be disease of the soul
 
Yes there is even death.
But there can always be a rebirth of love.
 
Wake to the choices you make as to how to live now.
Today, breathe.
Listen, behind the factory noises of your panic
The birds are singing again
The sky is clearing,
Spring is coming,
And we are always encompassed by Love.
 
Open the windows of your soul
And though you may not be able
to touch across the empty square,
Sing.    
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  • ABOUT US
    • Meet Our Clergy
    • Meet Our Staff
    • Meet the Vestry
    • 2023 Annual Meeting
    • Our History
    • Contact
  • Transition
  • Worship & Prayer
    • Download Service Bulletins
    • Pastoral Care
    • Art & Music >
      • Visual Art
      • Music
  • FORMATION
    • Adult Formation
    • Children & Youth
    • Intergenerational Formation
    • Lenten Book Group
  • Outreach & Social Justice
    • Casa San Miguel Food Pantry
    • The Landing
    • LGBTQIA+
    • Immigration Ministry
    • All Angels Episcopal Day School
  • Give