Glory's Interventions

Glory’s Interventions

Jeremiah 31:31-35; Psalm 119:9-16; Hebrews 5:5-10; John 12:19-33

Rev. Tiare L. Mathison, Pastor, Soul-Tender, Content Provider

It was the day after.

There had been a big hullabaloo in the morning, cloaks thrown down, branches torn off, Palm Trees to wave, children run and shout, all the folk who had come for the festival out in the streets, “Hosanna! Blessed is The One who comes in God’s Name - the King of Israel!”

The day before this, He raised Lazarus from the dead, no wonder people were shouting. They couldn’t stop talking about this sign! Suddenly, it seemed like they just might get a Messiah worthy of the name. If He could raise someone from the dead, imagine the power!!! One who would overthrow the oppressors and save them from the tramping boots of empire, matched in lockstep to squelch any rebellion that might arise during Passover. 200,000 people in the city, you never know who might get hurt. Even their own religious leaders said to one another, “You see, you can do nothing. Look, the whole world has gone after Him.” Their plot to kill Him and Lazarus thwarted by the crowd’s adulation. A better time will come in the next few days, empire’s power and religious jealousy and betrayal entwined.

He comes riding on a donkey, to fulfill an ancient Scripture story: “Look, Your King is coming sitting on a donkey’s colt!” Zechariah’s prophesy finally complete after 400 years. No chariots of fire, no fierce legion of soldiers leading the way, no ruler perched atop a robust stallion. Rather, a simple man from Galilee, a small band of women and men walking beside Him, unsure of all that has taken place and afraid of what might happen once they get into the heart of the city. “The hour has come,” He says. What time is it? The Greeks ask to see Him. Now, when I am lifted up. Glory’s Interventions

His last public words challenge the domination of cosmos - the system arrayed AGAINST everything that is of God. The myth of redemptive violence, that is, a primary belief that the way to bring order to chaos is through defeating ‘the other’ by use of force, strengthened by habits of domination that keep everyone in their place. “When I am lifted up, I will draw all people to myself.” He declares His way of death via crucifixion, the ignoble penalty for criminals and outcasts of the day. They can’t see it yet, these disciples and the Greeks and the Gentiles and the Samaritans, and the women, and the lame, the blind, the poor. It is too hard to acknowledge that God’s love is REVEALED in the tortuous cross, provision made for movement from darkness to light, death to life, earth to heaven, here to eternity. His death will expose the demonic ‘rulers of our day’ for what they are - capricious power mongers who demand ultimate loyalty. His blood shed is the force that will throw off the system that demands conformity to their false belief in alienation from God, from neighbor and from self. His life is lived as the primary Yes to God, the life of one who has the law written on one’s heart, His wholeness a witness to the power of redemption.

In this demystifying process, the challenge is laid out: lose your life, lose your lousy, messed up demonic view of yourself. Believe that you are created, in the Image of God, for generosity in mercy and justice, not shamed into your ‘slot’ within the system. Let that one die in the beautiful light of the cross. He doesn’t offer up a glamorous or prosperous life but one committed to suffering on behalf of others. It is a disciplined life focused on empathy. Standing with, beside, bearing witness to another’s pain and sorrow. And another’s joy and celebration. This gift of life offers eyes to see the true awfulness of the dehumanizing structures AND empowers to move toward the other in deep engagement. It is not so much an individual story of overcoming sin, at least in this gospel, as it is gaining power to stand together against the superhuman forces that grab hold of peoples lives, and argues, their way is the only way. Stay in your place, guard what you have, lull yourself with more things, or use a substance to keep you passive. Don’t raise a cry on anyone’s behalf or you will be put down.

Glory’s Interventions

The mission is explained one more time. Glory is not might. It is laying down one’s life on the cross to be lifted up as the Savior who conquers the grave. “I have come for this very thing,” He says. Even as the violence gets very close and His soul IS ‘troubled’ on the night before His arrest, He does not abandon His vocation, His Yes.

In the ancient history of humanity, there was a deep and abiding No to God’s gracious invitation of Yes to life. In the wisdom and mystery of God, He, the Precious Son, is sent as the first movement of a fulfillment of the covenant. A humble act of total self-emptying, His hour is complete in a love that surrenders to human existence. The forces of evil are all arrayed: religious, political, cultural, economic, every structure poised to pound the nails. For they know this One. They recognize they are in a pitched battle with the great God of the Universe. No king lays down his life for his people! What a ridiculous and unbelievable thing. His very humanity is at stake for the new Yes meets the Divine Yes never to be revoked. Unless the seed falls to the ground... Death precedes life.

The shadow of the cross hovers over Him as He stands His ground on behalf of the whole world. He asks us not to look away, rather, to look with wide-open eyes at the cross and its revelation of systematic evil that surrounds us and invades our lives. He asks us to be absolutely diligent and forthcoming in our examination of our practices and habits of thinking. He wants us to raise our conscious awareness of the lack of equity and inclusion and not let it slide away because we are tired. His love for us is complete and demanding. Obedience is a long-haul effort, one in which we come together every week to encourage one another. It is a setting of the will for the common good rather than solely self-interest. We have been saved by His shed blood. Now is our chance to offer our grateful praise and thanksgiving by casting off the powers and principalities and hold on. For resurrection is coming...Glory’s Interventions. Amen

I know it’s hard to look up and see Glory after the week we have lived. First I offer the names of the people killed in Atlanta and the. A video clip that my colleague, Pastor Charlene Han Campbell from First Pres Berkeley created for her congregation.

Say their names and then introduce video clip.

The authorities have identified those killed in the attacks as Soon Chung Park, 74; Hyun Jung Grant, 51; Suncha Kim, 69; Yong Ae Yue, 63; Delaina Ashley Yaun, 33; Xiaojie Tan, 49; Daoyou Feng, 44; and Paul Andre Michels, 54. Elcias R. Hernandez-Ortiz, 30, was seriously injured.

"It's About Grace"

It’s About Grace

Psalm 107:1-3, 17-22; Ephesians 2:1-10; John 3:14-21

Rev. Tiare L. Mathison, Pastor & Soul-Tender

To get us going this morning, I’ve got a request. Please tell us what brought you joy this past week. I know we are weary, anxious, impatient to get back to normal, whatever that is; I think an experience of joy is the vaccine we need for our despair. To get us started, I’m going to tell you my joy! Then, unmute yourself and speak up! We’ll take as much time as we need. My joy? I got to make dinner for my dear niece, Sarah, Wednesday night. She is the first person I have cooked for, other than Jeff, in so many months I cannot even remember. It made me giddy! And still giddy on Thursday morning when I was describing he dinner party to Jeff!

BUT GOD...

PERMANENT MERCY.

We live in the mercy of God.

We pray in the mercy of God.

We exist by the mercy of God.

We are shadowed by the mercy of God.

We need to be reassured the enemy’s lies are defeated. “Once, before, when you were dead...following the dynamics and powers of the day...”. In Greek cosmology, the space between the moon and the earth was dominated by demonic activity. Today we talk about ‘powers & principalities’ or social forces structured to keep the empire going, as our cosmology. We experience its demands for our obedience or at least our passivity, so no change is really possible. James Baldwin, mid-20th century African-American writer and critic of whiteness in America wrote: “I speak of change not on the surface but at its depth, renewal.” This is what evil systems don’t want!

But God!

What kind of God? A rich in mercy God! You’ve heard me say this before: such mercy... the tattoo I keep promising to get when the pandemic is over.

We live between two gifts - goodness and mercy, one foot in The Fall and one foot in The New Creation. One goes before us preparing the way, and stakes a claim on our created goodness. Remember this? In the beginning, on the 6th day, humanity was made and declared very good. Fundamentally good. Bearing the image of God good! God has already gone before us to prepare this verdant space. It shines in the firmament of glory.

The other comes along behind, busy with the mess and muck of our lives. We don’t earn this grace by being good, it is part and parcel of the rich in mercy God. It’s why we make confession every week. For we know we miss the mark. Every which way we turn, we run into God.

The ultimate truth is lived out in Jesus’ life, death and resurrection, of which we are witnesses. For God so loved the world! So, in this sense, is emotive, passionate, decisive. It is a declaration of purpose. This rich in mercy God SENDS His Son, SENDS! to save. The embodiment of grace - by grace you have been saved - receive this gift. Believe, in John’s terminology, means you have received the gift of eternal life already. If not, you live in the darkness and commit your deeds there. There is no middle way in this particular gospel.

We do live with a theological mystery here that has been argued about for centuries. Is God’s salvation universal? Will everyone be saved? If not, why not? It’s not God who blocks universal salvation, its us humans, by our response or lack thereof, many believe. Belief, in our context, has been situated with propositional truth - the Bible says it, I believe it, that settles it. This is not a confession of faith. For it is not born out of recognition of our former ‘deadness’, rather the power of the intellect to offer ascent. “By grace you have been saved through faith” these prepositions - by & through - leave us to plumb the depths of our faith over the course of our entire lives. By grace you have been saved through faith. We experience God’s grace in moments of great joy or deep sorrow. We catch a glimpse of forgiveness or an explicit act of justice and from deep within our spirits we echo, yes, right. It’s about grace.

It is this power that brings healing for us and for the world. And once we know, we know there is enough to share. It’s all about God. Her search lights running down through the darkness. We fall to our knees as the rescue workers and ambulances come.

It’s About Grace.

And it’s about service. Verse 10 of Ephesians 2 is directly translated, “we are the poem of God” which I love, of course! Made to do good, made for it! This new creation, of which we are a part, is designed, shaped and formed, to be a way of life. Every step we take, every decision we make, every act we commit, has the possibility of unfathomable goodness attached to it. God spreads her wealth of mercy far and vast and deep and wide. An old gospel song says, It is no secret what God can do. What He’s done for others, He’ll do for you. With arms wide open, He’ll pardon you. It is no secret what God can do. This is where we live! One foot in the grime of The Fall and one foot in the garden of goodness in the New Creation. If we trust God’s grace for us, then it behooves us to be obedient in our service to others.

It’s why the session signed on to be a Matthew 25 church during a denominational campaign a couple of years ago. To publicly declare our intention to offer a cup of cold water, a meal, a coat, a prison visit, a food pantry, eco-boxes for Campbell Farm. We accept God’s grace found in Jesus Christ and by power of the Holy Spirit, we search out ways to love our neighbor and serve our communities, in pursuit of justice and peace for all. It’s about grace.

Amen