Let the words of my mouth and the meditations of all our hearts be acceptable in your sight, O Lord, our strength and our redeemer (Psalm 19:14).

Monday, July 11, 2016

The Eighth Sunday after Pentecost - July 10


Do More
Proper 10
Luke 10:25-37

This past week, many people have publicly urged us to pray.

I hope you didn’t need to be urged to pray.

I hope you pray even in weeks when the news is not quite as bad as it was this week.  There are always things in the news worthy of prayer.

Our President has urged us to pray.  Our Presiding Bishop has urged us to “deep” prayer.  Our own Bishop, Jeff Lee, has urged us to pray.

We’ve been asked to pray for justice.  For the dismantling of systemic racism.  We’ve been asked to pray that hate may be disarmed, both literally and figuratively.  We have been asked to pray for the police officers brutally and senselessly killed in Dallas and for their families and for everyone in law enforcement.

And we should pray.  We should fill the world with prayer.  Fill the world with prayer so that maybe there is a little less room for violence and hate.

Into this context of constant requests for prayer and frequent affirmations of prayer, a Christian blogger posted a reflection that generated some interest.  It was titled “Why Christians Need to Stop Praying.”  You can imagine that it generated some heated comments!  But I think most people who criticized it had probably only read the title, which was meant to be provocative.  It’s by a pastor named John Pavlovitz.  (You can read it HERE.)  I don’t know much about him except his posts show up from time to time on the Facebook feeds of friends of mine.

I would never discourage you from prayer.  Never.

There are many reasons to pray and many benefits of prayer.  The point of the blog is to say that, within the context of social justice, prayer without action is a cop out.  If we are praying for social justice, prayer without action is a cop out.

He imagines God is tired of hearing us…

Praying for hungry people instead of skipping our second latte of the day and buying them lunch….
Praying for families of murdered black men instead of speaking directly into the institutionalized racism [that pervades our society.]

He also says:

Stop feeling so stinkin’ good about yourself for feeling bad.
Praying for God to move and sitting still isn’t redemptive. It’s empty religion.
This is not about passing the buck to God.
The collect appointed for us today in the Episcopal Church gets to the same point.

“O Lord, mercifully receive the prayers of your people,” it begins.  Lord, hear the prayers of your people.  If I only knew that opening phrase, I might imagine several ways the prayer might continue:

--O Lord, receive the prayers of your people, and come to help us, fill our need.
--Receive the prayers of your people and shed abroad your strength.  In your mighty power, act.
--O Lord, receive the prayers of your people and fix all those things we want fixed.

We do have collects along those lines, although the language is more elegant.  But that’s not how it goes.

O Lord, mercifully receive the prayers of your people who call upon you, and grant that they may know and understand what things they ought to do, and also may have grace and power faithfully to accomplish them

There is one thing I would change about the collect.  I’d change it from third person to first person.  Lord, receive our prayers as we call upon you and grant that we may know and understand what things we ought to do, and give us the grace and power faithfully to accomplish them.

I talk about the collects from time to time.  This is one of the ancient ones.  It comes from a Sacramentary, a medieval worship book, in Latin.  The earliest manuscript is from the 8th century.  A modern commentator on our Prayer Book writes:  “It summarizes succinctly the two-fold meaning and purpose of prayer:  to perceive God’s will, and to seek the strength which is necessary for the accomplishment of it.”  Help us, O Lord, to perceive your will and give us the strength to accomplish it.

The Gospel appointed for today speaks to this as well.  It is the familiar parable of the Good Samaritan.

I’ve recently been reading Amy-Jill Levine’s book on Jesus’ parables (Short Stories by Jesus:  The Enigmatic Parables of a Controversial Rabbi).  She is a Biblical scholar who happens to be Jewish.  She has a particular interest in restoring a more authentic Jewish context to the accounts of Jesus’ ministry.  Writing about this parable, she stresses that the meaning is all in that last line where Jesus says:  Go and do likewise.  Go.  And do.  “Loving God and loving neighbor cannot exist in the abstract; they need to be enacted.”  Go.  And do.

During the course of our Christian history this parable has often been used to condemn or criticize the Jews, to foster division.  Commentators disparage the Jewish priest and Levite who passed the injured man by.  But Levine stresses that it is primarily a parable about an interaction between two people.  Two fierce enemies.

In Jesus’ day Jews and Samaritans were enemies.  Divided by religion.  Divided by geography.  Divided by history.  Divided by conflict.  Many of the things that continue to divide us today.

And in this parable, those divisions are stunningly bridged.  It’s about the meeting, the interaction, between two enemies.

Levine suggests that if Jesus were to tell this parable today within a Jewish context, he might tell it as:  The parable of the Good Hamas member.
Or we might imagine that if he were to tell it in an American context, he might tell it as: The parable of the Good ISIS member.

If you follow the blogger Pavlovitz to the end of his piece, he does offer a prayer.  He prays that we who follow Christ as Lord will begin to emulate him.  He prays that we Christians will do what Jesus did.

My version of that prayer this week is that God will help me be a better neighbor.  Help me be a better neighbor to people who are different from me.  Help me to understand what I can do and give me the strength to do it.

Not to pat myself on the back, but to give just a few examples.

A few weeks ago I had the opportunity to attend an iftar.  I had to look it up.  It is the name of the meal when Muslims break their fast at sundown during Ramadan.  The Mosque Foundation, a large mosque in Bridgeview, holds an interfaith, community iftar each year.  They invite their neighbors.

I’m not usually looking for additional things to do in the evenings.  Especially a Tuesday evening, my day off.  I’m not usually excited about an event where dinner won’t start until 8:31.  But I went.  And I’m very glad I did, and I’m looking forward to additional opportunities to join with our Muslim neighbors here in the south and southwest suburbs.

And within the context of the racial issues that are so important in our society today, I’m trying to listen.  I can only speak as someone who is white.  But I’m trying to listen to the voices of people of color.  Even the particular voices I would really like to shut up.  To listen to their words and their descriptions of their experiences.

It occurred to me this week that my own life would be much happier…  that I would feel restored and peaceful…  if I just turned off the news.  It also occurred to me what a monumental privilege, luxury, it is that the only thing I am assaulted by is the news.

All of us need to do something more than what we are doing now.  I am absolutely certain that the status quo is not God’s will for us.  The current state of our society is not the fullness of God’s will for us.  So we need to do more.  Do more to love our neighbor as ourselves.

O Lord, mercifully receive the prayers of your people who call upon you, and grant that they may know and understand what things they ought to do, and also may have grace and power faithfully to accomplish them.  Amen.