Sermon preached on October 19, 2014
Texts: Exodus
33:12-23
“God.” It is amazing how three simple letters put
together in this way can be so powerful.
Some think this combination of letters is a meaningless symbol, or a
word pointing toward nothing that really exists. If polls are any indication, these folks are
in a minority. For most of us, “God” is
a word that denotes a reality.
For
Christians, God matters. There is no
Christian faith without God. Even the
theologian who in the 1960s wrote a book entitled The Gospel of Christian
Atheism, and was rather famous for being part of the “death of God”
movement which made the cover of Time magazine,
which meant more then, than it probably does today, even Thomas J. J. Altizer
who wrote about the death of God continues to write and think about God. The
primary calling of the theologian is to name God…. While silence is now the primary path of the
theologian, particularly silence about God, this is a silence which I have ever
more deeply and comprehensively refused, for I am simply incapable of not
naming God. (Living the Death of God: a theological memoir,
xvii-xviii). Whatever Altizer meant by
the death of God, he continues to struggle with the reality of this God.
And
for followers of Jesus, we are incapable of not naming God. Jesus spoke often of God, and of “the kingdom
of God.” Jesus makes little sense
outside of some notion of God, and for Christians one of our affirmations about
Jesus is that in him, we know something more about God. The theologian Marcus Borg, in his book about
God, writes, “As a Jesus scholar, I have found it impossible to say very much
about Jesus without also talking about God” (The God We Never Knew,
vii).
God
is central to Christian faith, and we look to the Bible, and especially to
Jesus, to try and understand more about who God is. When we do that, though, we discover that the
God of the Bible, and the God of Jesus is a God of the glimpse, the soft
breeze, the gentle touch, the sideways glance.
I appreciate how theologian Marjorie Suchocki writes about “the whisper
quality of God’s creative word.” It can easily be drowned out by the sheer
weight of the past with which and through which it must work. It is clothed in the past, even as it
bespeaks a future, and it leads us not through extraordinary leaps and bounds,
but most often through a quite ordinary faithfulness in the midst of
things. God’s word is hidden
incarnationally in the world. It is a
whisper. (The Whispered Word, 6)
God
is present everywhere and at all times, but the presence of God can be elusive,
hard to name. God’s presence is the soft
breeze. God’s voice is the whisper. Seeing God is the glimpse, the sideways
glance.
One
biblical story that speaks about this so eloquently is the one we read this
morning about Moses. To set some
context: the people have been led to freedom from Egypt. They are making their way to the promised
land, but not without some hiccups along the way. They have complained about food and
drink. They have gathered around Mount
Sinai, and Moses has ascended to speak with God and receive commandments. In his absence, the people decide to create a
god, a golden calf. Moses comes down the
mountain, and breaks stone tablets with the commands when he sees what the
people have done. God and Moses continue
to have conference, however, this time in Moses’ tent. That’s where today’s scene takes place. Moses and God are conversing, and Moses asks
to see God’s glory. God tells Moses that
he has found favor and that the request will be granted. The scene is filled with some tenderness and
some humor. No one can see the face of
God, so God passes by, covering the face of Moses until God has passed, then
taking away his hand so Moses could see his backside.
God
is a God of the glimpse, of the sideways glance. God can be a little cheeky, pun
intended. As with Moses, our own speech
about God, our own experiences of God, have an indirectness about them – the
glimpse, the glance, the breeze, the whisper.
Writer
Patrick Henry is helpful to me here, when he writes about the grace of “a God
of surprises.” The grace of this God is mysterious, sneaky. Some Christians chalk things up much too
easily, much too quickly to the grace of God….
I trust God’s grace, but hesitate to identify it in particular
places. It often blindsides me,
regularly catches me off guard, seldom hits me square in the face. When I know
the grace of God, it’s nearly always after the fact, usually long
afterward. (The Ironic Christian’s Companion, 1-2). God touches our lives in surprising
ways. God can be a little saucy, can be
bold, can be playful – in short, a little cheeky.
Part
of our task as a church is to help each other see God at work in our lives and
in our world. Part of our task as a
church is to help each other be more open to the Spirit of God in our lives. This is how we love each other into life.
So
where are some of the places we help each other see God, feel God, know God –
even if it is a glimpse, a sideways glance?
For many of us, the songs of the church, traditionally called “hymns”
from the Greek word for “song of praise,” are places where we glimpse God. Last week Ron Yardley led a discussion of the
hymnal and he collected some favorite hymns.
We are going to sing some of them in a bit. For some of you, they will provide a glimpse
of God.
For
others, the traditional language in some of the songs of our faith can be a
barrier to connecting more deeply with God.
Perhaps one of the tasks of the church is to help re-vivify some of that
traditional language, to help make it so it can speak to us, to make it a
conduit for a sideways glance of God.
Yet we also need to acknowledge some limits to some traditional
religious language. In his book written
following September 11, 2001, Rowen Williams, who later became the Archbishop
of Canterbury, wrote this: Last words.
We have had the chance to read the messages sent by passengers on the
planes to their spouses and families in the desperate last minutes; and we have
seen the spiritual advice apparently given to the terrorists by one of their
number, the thoughts that should be their minds as they approach the death they
have chosen…. The religious words are,
in the cold light of day, the words that murderers are saying to themselves to
make a martyr’s drama out of a crime.
The nonreligious words are testimony to what religious language is
supposed to be about – the triumph of pointless, gratuitous love, the affirming
of faithfulness even when there is nothing to be done or salvaged. (Writing
in the Dust, 3). Perhaps the failure
of some of our traditional religious language to connect deeply with life and
with love is a reason communities of faith are struggling these days. I will admit that sometimes a secular song
helps me glimpse God even more vividly than a purportedly religious song. Music, in itself can help us get a sideways
glance at God.
So
where else have there been some God-sightings and grace happenings? The English poet William Blake, in his poem
“The Divine Image” wrote, “Where Mercy, Love and Pity dwell/There God is
dwelling too.” Acts of kindness give me
glimpses of God and recently the great potato giveaway was a kind of glimpse of
God. The Ruby’s Pantry organization had
potatoes they wanted to distribute, on short notice. One member of our local committee was excited
by the opportunity. I was
concerned. This was to happen early in
the week of our Roast Beef Dinner. Would
all the potatoes be gone by Thursday? I
was going to be out of town the day the potatoes were to arrive, and so was not
going to be any help. The potatoes came,
and they went quicker than anyone might have imagined. People are being fed. A sideways glance toward God.
Renewed
connections can be glimpses of God. Last
week, a young man who had been a part of the youth group I led when I was a
youth pastor in Dallas contacted me. It
turns out that he is now in seminary, and part of what he wanted to do was tell
me that I had been an important part of his spiritual journey, even though he
told me he would have described himself as an atheist while he attended youth
group. A sideways glance toward God.
Poetry
often helps me hear the whisper of God, though I know it has the exact opposite
effect on some. A well-turned phrase or
image in a poem penetrates to the depth of my heart and soul. Here is a Mary Oliver poem I bumped into the
other day.
Who Said This? (Red
Bird, 58)
Something whispered
something
that was not even a
word.
It was more like a
silence
that was
understandable.
I was standing
at the edge of the
pond.
Nothing living, what
we call living,
was in sight.
And yet, the voice entered
me,
my body-life,
with so much
happiness.
And there was nothing
there
but the water, the
sky, the grass.
Perhaps that’s often how we get a
glimpse of God, are granted a sideways glance, hear the whisper, feel the
gentle breeze – as something whispering something that was not even a word,
more like a silence that is understandable.
Where
are you glimpsing God? Where is God
inviting you toward a sideways glance? How
are we helping each other catch glimpses of God, hear God’s whisper? Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment