Sermon for the 10th Sunday after Pentecost, July 17, 2011
Texts: Genesis 28:10-19a; Romans 8:12-25; Matthew 13:24-30,36-43.
Norquay, Saskatchewan is a small farming town populated mostly by native peoples and immigrants from Sweden and the Ukraine. They all had their own places of worship. About forty years ago I joined my father and my uncles on a drive through the Saskatchewan countryside. We stopped to see an Anglican church on the Key Indian Reserve. It was white clapboard, and about the size of the smaller Carpenter Gothic churches in our diocese. Gold letters inscribed on the archway between the sanctuary and the rest of the nave read: “How awesome is this place! This is none other than the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven.” My uncles pointed it out, and my dad reminded me that these were the words of Jacob, the starry night he spent outdoors with a stone for a pillow, when he awoke from his vision of angels ascending and descending the heavenly ladder. We spent a few more minutes, and then we climbed back into the truck and drove back to the farm.
I have often thought about that tiny Anglican church when I’ve read the story of Jacob. How is it that, sometime, somehow, it becomes clear that God is present? That God is present, gloriously present, has been present all along, and we did not know it?
A lot of us are like Jacob. We are going about our business, living life with its messy relationships, frustrating living conditions, challenges and triumphs, trying to reach our goals. And it may not be the best life, but it’s the best we know how to do. We’re not hostile to God. But we don’t really spend a lot of our time in religious devotion.
And then…so unexpectedly… we have an awakening. God explodes into our lives, and we are in total awe of a world that looks so different, now that we see God’s presence in it, realizing God was there all along, but we weren’t aware.
It is a nearly universal human response to mark the place and time of that exceptional divine intervention in some way. Jacob built an altar incorporating the stone that had been his pillow the night before, when heaven opened up to him and he saw God’s messengers moving back and forth between heaven and earth, between God’s realm and ours.
It’s this impulse that is behind building churches, and behind identifying some places as sacred, or recognizing what the Celtic Christians called “Thin places,” places where the membrane separating heaven and earth has a small hole for us to peek through.
And of course the question becomes: once you’ve become aware of God’s awesome presence, how, as a person changed by an encounter with God, do you go on with your daily tasks? God appeared—or let himself be glimpsed—for just a moment, and wants a relationship. How do we keep it going from our end? I’d like to suggest to you that whatever we do from our side in this God-initiated relationship may be called prayer.
There are lots of different ways to pray. Some involve slack-jawed awe at the beauties of the world, right there in front of us. Some involve seeking to set aside everything else that is going on in our hearts and minds so that we can simply be in God’s loving presence so that, as one of our prayers says, “we who are wearied by the changes and chances of this life may rest in God’s eternal changelessness.” This is a rich and nourishing way to pray.
But there is also the sort of prayer that people come to priests to talk about. People come and they say:
§ “I don’t quite know what to say.”
§ “I feel like I’m talking to the ceiling.”
§ “I feel like a greedy three-year-old and God is Santa at the mall.”
§ “How do I know if it does any good?”
§ “I’m just an ordinary person. What business do I have bothering God?”
Many of us were taught to pray when we were very small. If we were lucky, we learned to say “Thank you.” Thank you for the food. Thank you for Mommy and Daddy. Thank you for the sun, the moon, our pets, our house... We don’t have to give that one up! We still say “Thank you!”
We also learned to ask God to bless the people we love: “God bless our parents, our brothers and sisters, our aunts and uncles, our grandparents, the goldfish, the trees…” You never know what you’ll hear a child pray for. When we learn, as a child, to ask God to bless someone, it is a wonderful thing, because it is so open-ended. You will find as an adult that it is still an appropriate way to pray. It is a way of holding that person in our hearts and knowing that they are beloved by God, even if, as our collect says, we don’t or can’t ask for specific things for them.
We may have learned as well to ask God for forgiveness. “Forgive me for punching my brother…for eating the last five pieces of pie…for forgetting to do my homework…for talking back to Dad…” We don’t outgrow a need to pray for forgiveness and long for reconciliation.
And we may have learned to ask God for help. “Help Grandma to get better.” “Help my lost dog to find her way home.” “Help me to do well on my test tomorrow.” I seem to remember that it was George Will who said: “As long as there are math tests there will be prayer in the public schools.” These prayers become more problematic as we get older and realize that Grandma does eventually die, that sometimes the dog gets run over, that God helps us most on our math tests when we’ve studied hard. We hedge our bets: “God, if it is your will…” But maybe it’s more than hedging our bets. It’s acknowledging our finitude and limitations, and it’s being conscious that God is good, just, and loving.
And we may have learned to ask God for things. One of my friends calls these the “Red fire engine” prayers. “God, for Christmas I want a red fire engine that you can sit in and pedal. Please! Please! Please! I’ve been good and I deserve it!” Some people never grow out of this way of praying. There’s even a line of thinking that says that it’s a sign that God loves you if you ask for and receive financial success and wealth, even expensive cars and houses. It’s hard to imagine Episcopalians falling for the Prosperity Gospel. (Perhaps that’s because we are egotistical enough to conclude—dangerously-- that we’re successful on our own.)
But today’s Collect assumes that we will ask God for things, for specific help—and that such prayers are appropriate, even though, being finite, we may not always know what or how to ask.
You may find that there are prayers that others have put into words that express what you are feeling. If they help, use them. If your own words or more direct, non-verbally mediated prayer come forth from your heart, that is also wonderful. Make time. Do whatever it takes to remember every minute that “surely the presence of the LORD is in THIS place.” There’s no place where this is not true. Where we are right now, God is here. Some of your prayer life will go on as a background to your daily activities. Sometimes you will want to schedule time to be intentional in prayer. You may find that the habit of praying Morning and Evening prayer with the help of the Bible and Book of Common Prayer keeps your prayer life strong. You may want to read what other servants of Jesus have said about their prayer life.
Anne Lamott said in a recent interview on Beliefnet:[1]
My prayer life is pretty automatic and is mostly three important prayers: "Help me, help me, help me"; "Thank you, thank you God"; and "Wow"—which I say almost every time I step out of the house, and when everything’s worked out in a way that makes me smile or that surprises me, and whenever I think God is being a show-off.
To Anne Lamott’s list I might add “Why?” “Why, God, why?” We may cynically dismiss such praying as whining. But if that’s what it is, it’s whining in good company. The psalmist asks God “why?” –or the related question: “How long…?”—with surprising regularity.
And that takes us to two of our readings today. Both the parable in the Gospel of Matthew and in the passage from Paul’s letter to the Romans that we heard read today are motivated by prayerful thinking about why things are the way they are, and longing with some impatience for God’s decisive intervention.
In the Gospel parable, Jesus is offering a way to understand that as we experience it now, weeds and wheat are growing up side-by-side, and that often you can’t tell them apart until they ripen. An enemy has got into the fields and planted weeds all mixed in with the wheat. A very important thing to remember about this parable is which roles are ours to play in the allegory. We are the seed planted in the field. We are not the owner of the field, or even, in this parable, the workers who might be able to do some judicious weeding. Our role is simply to grow, to do what seed does when it’s planted in a well-prepared field, in the presence of rain and sunshine.
Paul, also, is concerned about the unfinished nature of God’s business with the world. Jesus, the Son of God, has come. He has set us free to live as God’s children. And yet we still see the painful results of sin and death. Paul uses the very apt metaphor of being in labor. The whole created order is in labor, longing for the new birth of the Kingdom of God. Those of us who have been in labor can tell you a few things about it: You can lose perspective in the intensity of labor. A loving hand holding yours helps. You sometimes think that it will go on forever. When you think it’s impossible, you get a little break. But it’s back to work in a minute or two. You can not ask to quit for today and finish in a week or so. The only way out is through. And how you get through is by hope, by remembering that every minute is getting you closer to the joy and glory of new birth.
What an apt description of how God is at work in our lives! Paul helps us to pray even when pain and sorrow and suffering are an inescapable part of our life. And so, we are like Jacob. Or we are like Gerard Manley Hopkins who wrote the marvelous poem that begins “The world is charged with the grandeur of God!” Pray like the proverbial Chicago voter, early and often! Because God is here, now, and THIS place is awesome. Awesome even when we still see some weeds in the field and can’t do much about them. Awesome even when the way forward seems hard. We’re just around the corner from greater glory than we can even imagine. THIS place—Mulberry, Florida—is the gate of heaven!