Baptism of the Lord! January 8, 2023

The Elements of Our Imaginary

Is. 42:1-9; Psalm 29; Matt. 3:1-7, 11-17

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

Shake, break, whirl, flash, strip bare. This is what the voice of the Lord, Yahweh does. It rattles our bones to our very core. Power is enflamed as Yahweh strips bear the cedars, shakes the wilderness, the oaks dance, the forest made naked. Yet the temple crowd all shout ‘glory!’

We shake, as we fall to the ground in front of this magnificence, this God who hovers over the waters of creation, who parts the Red Sea to free the people from their slaveries, this Lord doesn’t only promise peace, this Lord GIVES peace. Creation is reiterated, reminds us to pay attention, the voice capable of both blessing and curse. He presides over it all.

Water, evocative of baptism, sprinkled or dunked, indicates the very beginning, the moment before time began, an intake of breath, as God says yes, even knowing we would say no. The voice thunders and the waters roil. Life is given and life is taken away. Blessed be the Name of the Lord.

The Elements of Our Imaginary

This borrowed language, in Psalm 29, originally a Canaanite poem to the god baal, a storm god, adapted for worship of Israel’s God. Thunder and voice the same, a visceral response by all who hear, multi-sensory - sound, touch, sight - it signals the storehouse of our imaginary to open up and be enthralled. Triggered geographical memories - the specific location of Kadesh, The Sinai, site of God’s conversation with Moses, the original promise of land. Thunder, theophany, the Presence of the Lord, the earth claimed. Lowly beasts of burden gifted with joy, a marker of Eden’s peaceable kingdom. A deep ache arises as the longed-for community glimmers in the sunlight, just out of reach. (Pause)

Lebanon’s cedars, strong and straight, renowned in their beauty, are broken in His fury, fire ravages the ground. Real or metaphor, again it is this voice, this appearance of God Almighty, who explodes the worlds before us. It is the fire we witness at Pentecost, the Holy Spirit yells in tongues of fire, languages of the many from all over the known world. It is the reclamation by God, Her power displayed over all of nature. We watch in awe, a simple recognition of who is in charge and we, who are not.

It is no soft breeze that rips the oaks apart, it is the mighty wind voiced in a whirlwind that strips us all bare. A vulnerability of exposure shatters our structured fortress, knocks down our carefully curated public self, all pretense exposed for its lingering lies and sin. The Elements of Our Imaginary

(Say slowly!) This is the voice that speaks ‘Beloved’.

“Jesus didn’t come as a puppy, a dolphin or an angel,” I quoted Lisa Fishbeck last Sunday. No he did not. He came as a sensate being, this incarnated Son of the Most High God. ‘Beloved’ is His Name, a Pre-Fall human, unstained by sin, His own particularity shines in the light of the magnificent glory. No, He did not NEED to be baptized, washing sin away, symbol of restoration of relationship with God, He had nothing to repent. But, He so identified with humanity’s fallenness, He simply got in line. Thunder, now narrowed to dialogue -

John: “Not me! I need to be baptized by you.”

Jesus: “It’s okay, John, it’s okay. Part of the plan, not to worry. It is the proper, more righteous way.”

Such magnificence, such humility…

It was a 40 K walk ‘when Jesus came from Galilee to John at the Jordan River”, estimated at 2 weeks by historians. A very slow pace in my Camino imaginary! His body moved through the Bethsaida Valley a true human with bodily needs, food, shelter, a bathroom. He had blood in His veins, lungs that breathe, a brain and a heart beating for humanity. This is so important to be reminded for our faith. We are not wispy souls lingering in bodies for a moment. As Christians, baptized into eternal life, we believe our bodies will be resurrected, transformed, into Jesus’ likeness. I’ve sat with people, ravaged by cancer, who dream about their beautiful new bodies when they die. “No more pain Tiare, I’ll be able to dance!” In my mom’s last days, she spoke of seeing her parents again, killed in a car accident when she was 5. She died at 96. The resurrection of the body and life everlasting we say each Communion Sunday, and we actually mean these flesh & bones! The Elements of Our Imaginary

This baptismal act carries such weight. Water is critical to creation of the earth and of us babies. Water washes us vicariously in death, the removal of sin, and raises us up to new life, as Christ was raised from the dead. REMEMBER YOUR BAPTISM AND BE THANKFUL, I shout. Water makes us new, in the daily sense of a shower or a bath, and in the eternal sense, our name is now Beloved. (Pause)

With this name change, comes our duty - to live into and out of God’s intention, shown forth most clearly in the life of Jesus. He entered our fallen world and did what? Gave us the way to live: sacrifice ourselves for others, pursue justice and peace for the poor, call out the tyrants and oligarchs, name the evils of policy and politics that betray generosity and compassion; pray and stand against the demonic, demonstrate our full recognition that we are saved by the blood of Jesus and given life abundant!

In our exhausted lives, it is sometimes difficult to lift our gaze to see Yahweh enthroned forever, over everything, when our dailyness is marred by fear or despair, demons of depression and anxiety rattling their cell doors whenever we have a moment of faith. The fallenness of humanity ever present in our daily news cycle. Our own small mindedness, harming with our words the ones we love most.

Up against this dethronement is a promise from long ago. May the Lord give s/b translated The LORD Gives. What does the Lord give? After all the upheaval of water, earth, wind, fire, the Lord gives strength to His people, He blesses His people with peace.

You have been given strength, you have been given peace. Go and do likewise.

The Elements of Our Imaginary Amen.

Hymn 482

Then Apostle’s Creed

Who Is This God? January 1, 2023

Who is this God?

Isaiah 63: Hebrews 2:10-18; Matthew 2:13-23

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

‘Surely these are MY people: it is no messenger or angel but it is My Presence that saves them; it is My Love and My Pity to redeem them; I will lift them up and Carry Them,” God declares. In language that describes a single parent - “I will lift them up and carry them home,” - not only father but mother too - fierce, protective, generous and forgiving. This God acts in love to redeem and never stops. The prophet Isaiah tells us two things: #1) Trusting God does give the community the strength to endure the pain; #2) This present moment is not the end of the story. Remember what God has done before? Count on it…In Christ, the worst of it, death, has been overcome. Us Believers have no reason to fear death, for it is then we will see fully, the glory of God, as now we only see in part.

It seems to me we need a vigorous gospel to stand up to monsters, murderous politicians, dead children and wailing moms and dads - a gospel that meets the real pathos of our daily lives. I keep landing on the word TRUST. What makes God trustworthy? This God in particular - the God of Israel who promises to graft us Gentiles into the covenant of Sarah & Abraham? What words can be spoken to strengthen your trust in God today?

(Pause)

This is the God who cares so deeply about His peeps, about His world, His creation, He enters the fray and encounters the horrors of Herod. Herod, who has such an arrogance of power, he kills his own family members.

And maybe 20 little babies in Bethlehem. Mothers wail, Herod could care less. “I’m the closest thing to God they got,” he claims.

It is in the midst of turbulent history, where tyrants kill the innocent, parents flee in the middle of the night, run for their lives and their children’s lives, this is where God comes. At our borders as refugees flee violence and look for hope in the U>S>; rickety boats that go from Africa to Europe. In the heart of our cities where young black and brown men are at more danger from police violence to end their lives. Not with power and might, no. A sacrifice of power - God comes to us in our form - not a puppy or a dolphin or even an angel, as Lisa Fischbeck says - only a baby, fully human, frail, needy. To redeem the world and to claim all who believe.

God chooses the way of suffering, the long haul, the strength of the weak, just like our lives. He spends His power on us. He stands against the demonic to free humanity from its bondage to sin. He never gives up on us, even when we give up on each other and give up on Him and his precious earth.

Who Is This God?

Let me tell you what made me gasp this week: The writer of the letter to the Hebrews, tells us this: Jesus calls us sister or brother. Seriously! Sister or brother. Gasp!

Stop for a moment. Take a deep breath. Wait. Jesus calls you sister, Jesus calls you brother… Remember? You bear the image of God, in your very being. Our language so inadequate to explain what this could possibly mean. In the midst of our 12 days celebration of the Incarnation, we are invited to look past the shepherds, the manger, even the magi, into our very own lives. To discover The Word that became flesh and dwells among us, here in our neighborhoods. The Light, the gospel says, that shines everywhere, even at your dinner table, all over your home. Your brother Jesus is present. Wherever you are, He is too. This is the promise of the Presence - It is my Presence that saves - as Isaiah schools us. God spends His power on our salvation - not for the angels - rather to fully enter into humanity’s skin, the experience of neediness as a baby, grows up with parents who teach him right from wrong, who love him fiercely, who follow Him through all His trials. He knows what it means to be human. It is extravagant grace that calls us home.

Who Is This God?

Our Redeemer is a refugee, hidden in a foreign country for a couple of years as His folks wait for the monster Herod to die. He who on his deathbed ordered all political prisoners to be killed, so upon his death, there would be mourning throughout the land. He who had fortresses built all over Israel and Palestine for violent defense was his only strategy. He who killed at least one wife and several sons in fear they were plotting a take over. He who was so enraged by the Magi’s deception, ‘they went home another way’ and so paranoid of the promise of the Messiah, slaughtered the innocent in defense of the guilty.

This is the world Jesus was born into - this is the world Jesus came to save.

Who Is This God?

Isaiah foretold it, Mary believed and trusted what would be done came from God, as did Elizabeth by the way. Census counts hold no sway: the shepherds trusted the light and glory of the angels; the magi trusted a star; Joseph dreamed of safe passages and protected the infant life of the Messiah. These are the signs that point the way. In the midst of the worst humanity can do, God is still at work to gather us in, to redeem us, to restore the beauty and grace of Her image in us, marred by sin. To generate communities that seek what Jesus needs - to create a world where Jesus is never a refugee, there is always a welcome and plenty to share. Security not only promised but given.

As sisters and brothers of Jesus, we are called to ACT OUT, dare I say ACT UP? Our faith. To put our trust to work in our families & neighborhoods. To demand more from our politicians than the static status quo. The wealth of this nation is more than enough to feed, shelter, educate and provide work for every person and family. The gospel requires us to pursue justice and peace, to take a stand for all those who have no voice.

This is the God of Abraham & Sarah, King David, Isaiah, Matthew and St. Paul. A God who doesn’t play favorites, who loves the whole world and all who are in it. This God generates grace and love in every heartbeat of creation. This God, Immanuel. Amen