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« 10 Political Christmas Wishes | Main | Mark 1:21-28 "What Will You Do With Us, Jesus?" Epiphany 4B »

January 14, 2006

Jonah 3 & Mark 1:14-20 (Epiphany 3B) "Give Jonah a break"

The Lectionary blend gives us sharp contrasts in how people respond to God’s calling. Jonah was called by God to be a prophet to the city of Nineveh. Instead of going east to the city, he gets on a boat and goes west, as far away as he can from the call. His epic adventure worthy of the Odyssey includes being thrown overboard from a ship and swallowed by a whale and finally thrown up at the very point he started running from his mission. We could berate Jonah for his lack of faith or courage, but it is more helpful to identify with him for a moment. He was given a mission impossible. Nineveh was one of the greatest cities of its day. It was a city of conquerors, with a strong commercial base, superior technology and a powerful war machine. Jonah was from a strip of wilderness that the rest of the world passed thorough as a way station to somewhere else, kind of like I-95 running through New Jersey. Jonah had no credentials for such an act of international diplomacy. He would get even less respect than Ambassador of Palau would get in Washington,DC. (You get extra credit if you actually know where Palau is!) Imagine yourself suddenly being sent to the Sudan where the government is perpetuating a genocide of Christians in the southern area. God tells you to march through the hot desert and tell their leaders to repent, to stop the genocide, to hold democratic elections and respect everyone’s civil rights, use their wealth for the good of all the nation’s people. Do you think you would get their leadership to dress up in sack cloth and ashes? For that matter, imagine going to Washington,DC and demanding that elected officials stop the legalized bribery of our campaign finance system. Do you think you could bring both houses of Congress to sack cloth and ashes? See what I mean? Jonah had a mission impossible.

Jonah may be one of our patron saints. The world conspires to make Jonahs out of all of us. The world beats us down and tells us that you can’t change the big picture, so just fall in line and make the best living that you can for yourself and your family. Our values may tell us we need to head East to Nineveh, but we turn around and walk west and get on the boat with Jonah, because it is just too hard. We spend some of our precious time in the belly of the whale, out of touch with our calling, our sense of meaning and purpose.

Several years ago Michael Lerner wrote a book called “The Politics of Meaning.” Lerner said that to often we give up on our deepest held values of compassion, caring and community because they do not seem practical in the real world. Instead, an ethos of selfishness and materialism prevails by default. These are the values that we settle for when our deeper values seem out of reach. Whether we consider ourselves liberal or conservative or apolitical, Protestant Catholic, Jewish or New Age, individualism and materialism our powerful determinates of our lives. We may not have meaningful work or chances to make a difference, but materialism tells us that we can at lest “Do the Dew” and drive a comfortable car. We may not be able to bring about racial reconciliation or even have the kind of relationships we want, but individualism tells us that we can pursue our own happiness and carve out our own little niche for peace of mind. Ironically, these attitudes give us less freedom and power. Selfishness and materialism erode community and make it less possible to live the life we want. It puts us more out of purpose. Jonah’s way seems easier at first, but in the end we will get thrown overboard and end up in the belly of the whale.

In Mark’s Gospel, we read the story of how the first four disciples, Peter, Andrew, James and John, are called by Jesus to be disciples. While it takes three chapters for Jonah to get to Nineveh, in a remarkable 4 verses, these fishermen leave their nets, their security , and their families to follow Jesus. I know that I would want at least 48 hours to think through me decision, to weigh the consequences, to think about the family business and the implications of the career move. Of course, by the time I had done all that, Jesus would have moved on to the next town. The author tells us nothing of their inner deliberations, whether the fishing was good or bad, if they were religious people or not, if they got along with their father or had a sense of wanderlust. Mark merely says, “And immediately, they followed him.” This connecting phrase, “and immediately,” is the most common phrase in Mark’s Gospel, occurring 33 times in only 16 chapters. (By the way, this phrase never occurs in Jonah!)

This kind of immediacy was captured in a TV show I used to watch called “Early Edition.” The basic concept of the show is that an average guy with a good heart and modest prospects receives and early edition of the Chicago Sun Times every morning that tells not the news of yesterday, but what is actually going to happen today, unless he does something to change the future. He spends his day trying to avert various disasters and when he is successful, the news in the paper actually changes. He has two friends that are alter egos, one who urges him on, and the other is more like Jonah, counseling him to let some things go because there are some things you just can’t change.

In one episode, the hero reads that an airline will explode and kill 150 people at O’Hare Airport unless he does something to stop it. He heads out, but the traffic is completely tied up in downtown
Chicago and the subway trains are running late. He has only 30 minutes to take-off. As he waits for the train he reads the paper and sees a story about a six-year-old girl who was hit by a car. She dies because the hospital thought she had minor injuries and failed to examine her properly. Just then he sees the little girl going by on her bicycle. He has to make a split-second decision. There are 150 people about to die on the airline, but he may not get there, while the little girl is just down the street.

He runs after the little girl and reaches her moments after she is struck by a car. He scoops her up and races her on foot to the hospital. At the hospital, nobody believes she is badly hurt, and when he insists they examine her, they tell him to wait in line. All his persistence gets him is an escort from the building by security. So he sneaks in and finally pressures a doctor into examining her. The doctor finds the problem and saves the girls life. The twist in the plot comes in the end with two notes of providence. As the hero slumps in the hospital waiting room and rests, the doctor comes in to see him after the girl’s surgery. The doctor apologizes and admits that he has been jaded, forgetting the human dimension of his work. He says, “You saved more than that little girl’s life today. You may have just saved mine as well.” Then the little girl’s parents come to see her and her father is wearing a pilot uniform. He turns out to be the pilot of the airliner that would have exploded, but was called off the runway because his daughter was struck by a car. It turned out to be a two-for-one rescue!

I miss the show “Early Edition” and its wrestling with the dilemmas of what our role is in other peoples’ lives. How would we act differently if we knew the potential difference our lives make to others. In our cynicism, it is easy to forget that divine providence may work through us, that God brings about the good by weaving together our daily decisions. Our non-decisions may cause the fabric to unravel until God can find someone who can still hear and act in faith, hearing the call “and immediately” following it.

The immediacy of Mark’s Gospel is contained in the simple message Jesus delivers in Mark 1:14, “The time has come. The Kingdom of God is near. Repent and believe the good news!” Jesus does not spend a lot of time analyzing the big picture. His program is not very detailed. He didn’t write a two volume manifesto about how the world works and he probably would not have bee and very good pundit on “Hardball” or “The O’Reilly Factor.” He is more intent on telling us God’s picture of the world. God is near, God’s power is at work, hear this good news and follow me. Do you sometimes wonder if all our social analysis of problems, our therapies and our self-improvement tapes are just ways of protecting ourselves from the simple, life-changing power of the call of Christ? “Love your neighbor as yourself. Feed the hungry, house the homeless and you have done it to me. Abide in my love and I will abide in you. You are the light of the world, so let your light shine before all that they may see the glory of God. The reign of God is among you, within you. If you have faith, the mountain shall be moved for you.”

How could the disciples on follow him? As Peter said, “O Master, now that we have seen you, where else can we go?” How could we not also follow?

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Comments

Liked your Jonah/Mark thoughts a lot and would like to include some of them in this Sunday's sermon. (We're just into Epiphany 3 in the land of Oz)
Keeps those insights rolling...

Thanks for your support Lindsay. Should I assume you mean Kansas when you say "land of Oz?" When I was serving in the parish there were many times I felt like I was in Oz. I could play any one of the character; the lion trying to find his courage in the pulpit, Dorothy trying to help her little band find her way home, and on some days I felt like the Great Oz himself, telling everyone to ignore that man behind the curtain.

Maybe we can get a thread going here about ministry in the land of Oz. How do we help our little band of lions, tin men and scarecrows find their goal and our way home? How do we help our congregations find courage, heart and brains? What do we do about wicked witches and screaming monkeeys? How do we unmask the great Oz and find the true God? Which church committee is most like the "Lollipop Guild?" Its cold up here in New York. Maybe we can have some fun with this and generate some sermon ideas.

Todd - Blooming Cactus

Yes, that was good. I might steal some of your ideas too, if you don't mind (I will credit you though).

I am from Scotland, a minister (pastor), also a poet.

I had assumed that Lindsay meant Australia when he/she mentioned "Oz", but I hadn't thought of the Kansas line.

Cheers.

In the movie, 'Master and Commander the far side of the world' Capt. Aubrey tells the doctor, 'Sailers can abide a great many things, but not a Jonah.' The doctor replies, 'My God, you believe it too!' 'Not everything is in those books of yours' the Capt. replied.

We all have the tendancy towards being 'Jonahs' being cursed, running away from God's calling. But in the end, Those around us can't abide us. In our act of being safe, we reap the scorn from those we run to for aid.

Rob,
I had no idea Australia can be "Oz" as well. Maybe Linsay will check back and tell us. As for using materials from my site, go for it. Sermons are to be preached and circulated over and over. If you use something, just let me know how it went over if you get a chance, and click on the ads on the side. It helps pay for the site!

As for Scotland, I spent a Sabattical in Aberdeen about 8 years ago. I had a wonderful time there.

Peace,
Todd -bloomingcactus

Mark,

Yes, I remember that scene from "Master and Commander." It could work very well within the passage. If I remember correctly, the "Jonah" in the movie felt tormented by the crew and responsible for their misfortunes, so he threw himself overboard while holding on to a cannonball. In his case, his own scorn was quite powerful. Do you remember if he had done anything wrong on the ship? As I remember it, he was often on watch when bad things happened.

This is a wonderful reflection. The immediacy in which Andrew, Peter, James and John followed Christ is very significant. These guys never discussed the pay package nor the work benefits, but they just trusted. That absolute trust in the one who calls us is very important. Because he calls us, he will provide for us the means to carry out his work and our future. These guys lived in the providence of Christ. Today God calls us all to many things, how can we respond to him with trust? Many people have told me they cannot commit themselves to ministry or marriage because the world is changing and they do not know what the future holds for them. This is where we need to trust. Is'nt this the basis of faith. Faith is receiving from God what he wants to give us and not what we want. How do we respond to God in a world that looks down on people that uphold Christian values. As we celebrate the annual March for Life here in Washington, DC, it is important we invite our people to understand that God has called us to defend human life. It is'nt just enough to be anti-abortion though this is good, we have to be truly prolife, upholding the dignity of every human life from the very moment of conception to natural death.

At 4am on Saturday morning God provided the continued inspiration for my sermon on Sunday.
What you wrote really helped me to get through the fog of my sermon. I have 2 small children and so there are many times when "family stuff" pulls me to the left when i am trying to go to the right and listen to God's lead for my Sunday sermons.
Thank You!

Yes, I remember some Sundays where I still had baby spit on my tie when I came to church!

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