Sunday, July 6, 2014

A Declaration of Interdependence


(Scriptures: Genesis 24:34-67; Psalm 145,  I Corinthians 12:1-31,  Matthew 11:16-30)
 
 
A Declaration of Interdependence
 
As a lifelong member of the United Church of Christ – the UCC for short – I’ve heard folks outside our denomination give us lots of nicknames based on the initials UCC.  The one I heard most frequently growing up was “Utterly Confused Christians”.  Some of this was just people being jerky.  But besides that, there was also a sense that, for example, Catholics follow what the pope says, Lutherans follow what Martin Luther wrote, and Methodists follow what John Wesley wrote – but, since the United Church of Christ is a merger of the Evangelical & Reformed Church, based mostly in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and the Midwest –wherever Germans settled – with the Congregational Christian churches – founded by the Puritans and Pilgrims, and based mostly in New England – we draw from a variety of traditions and teachers, and so while we from the Reformed side of the denomination draw heavily on the teachings of Ulrich Zwingli, other parts of the denomination draw from John Calvin and from other Reformers….and these teachings, while broadly similar, also have some differences.   And so while I think that, within the denomination, we understand one another, to those outside the denomination, we can indeed at times seem utterly confused – or at least act in ways that are utterly confusing to them.
 
Another nickname I’ve heard from time to time is “Untied Church of Christ.  This one is easy to understand – if you’re typing quickly and transpose the “I” and “T”, the word United turns into Untied.  The United Methodist Church can get a similar rap, sometimes being characterized as the Untied Methodist Church.  But, beyond typographical errors, the label “Untied” can lead us to ask some serious questions.  Again, comparing to other denominations, the Catholics are united by allegiance to the Pope, the Anglicans to the Archbishop of Canterbury; Lutherans and Methodists have bishops; Presbyterian churches are organized into Synods with their own governing boards.  But while the UCC does have a denominational structure, based on the concept of covenant, in our denomination, local churches have much more autonomy than in many other denominations – and also much more responsibility to clean up any messes that result.  Churches have much more space to “go it alone” – not unlimited space, but more than in some other traditions.  To Christians used to denominations with more rigid, hierarchical structures, the UCC can feel a bit untied at times, like a loose confederation of individual Christian churches rather than a United Church of Christ. 
 
In our reading from I Corinthians, the apostle Paul is writing to a church he planted in the city of Corinth – a city which I visited on my recent vacation – and this church, which was united when Paul was among them, is now in danger of becoming untied.   Corinth was located along major trading routes, and was also a center for the manufacture of pottery….and so it was considered a relatively cosmopolitan city for its time.  It was also a relatively prosperous city, but the prosperity was not evenly shared, and so there were very rich and very poor.  The church at Corinth was divided among a number of fault lines – between rich and poor, between Jew and Gentile, and also between those who identified as followers of Paul vs followers of other teachers, such as Apollos and other leaders who came along later – some of whom did more harm than good.  Still other divisions existed between those who had particularly flashy gifts, such as speaking in tongues, vs those whose gifts were perhaps even more important to the function of the church, but didn’t have as much pizzazz.  In short, the church at Corinth was dysfunction junction.
 
In attempting to heal these divisions, Paul reminded them that they were all members of the body of Christ, all equally important to the body’s proper functioning.  Now we all know that the human body has some parts that are lovely to look at and others that are not so much, some parts we allow everyone to see and some parts we only allow those closest to us to see, and the body has some parts that are downright embarrassing.  But, Paul reminds them, whether one’s role in the body of Christ is that of being an eye or an ear or a nose – or, we could go on to say, that of being a toenail or a nose hair or a sinus or a sweat gland or an armpit – we all have a function.  No matter how seemingly insignificant our part may seem, when we function as we are called, the body is strengthened, and when we go AWOL, the body is weakened.
 
While our reading from Genesis took place of course centuries or even millenia before Christ’s earthly ministry,  we can see how important seemingly lowly service can be to the working out of God’s ways.  Our reading from Genesis gives us an absolutely lovely story of the coming together of Isaac, the son of Abraham, with his wife Rebekah.  The story reads like a match made in heaven – but Abraham’s trusted servant was in the background, making all sorts of arrangements in order to bring Rebekah and Isaac together…and as Abraham’s servant is working away, you might think of the song, “Matchmaker matchmaker make me a match, find me a find, catch me a catch….”.  Had the servant gone AWOL, Isaac and Rebekah might still have come together, but it would be a very different story under very different circumstances.  And so the servant’s role, however lowly, is absolutely crucial to how the story played out.  In the same way, our individual roles in the body of Christ, be they ever so humble, are crucial to the way the body of Christ functions.
 
Families can come untied….as the twin sons of Isaac and Rebekah, Jacob and Esau, became untied from one another, viewing each other as enemies for much of their lives  Churches can become untied as well.  And so can communities, even countries.  On this July 4 weekend, when we celebrate our nation’s independence from British rule, I have to say that, given the degree of political division in our country, one might wonder if we should rename ourselves the Untied States of America.  It goes without saying that we have sharp divisions between liberals and conservatives.  We have regional divisions – the old wounds of the American Civil War some 150 years ago still haven’t entirely healed.  We have divisions between rich and poor, racial divisions, divisions between native-born and immigrant – or, more accurately in most cases, between those whose families immigrated recently vs those whose families immigrations took place several generations ago, in the more distant past.  Our state of Pennsylvania has sharp divisions between urban and rural areas – political consultant James Carville famously characterized Pennsylvania as having Philadelphia on one end and Pittsburgh on the other end and Alabama in the middle.  Those city vs suburb vs rural divisions routinely create complications in the ministries of the Pennsylvania Southeast Conference, as many folks from the ‘burbs or the boonies are afraid to drive into Philadelphia, lest their cars be stolen and their wallets stolen and their persons violated, and many from our city churches either can’t drive to the suburbs, let alone farm country, because they don’t have cars, or they don’t want to drive to the suburbs or rural areas because they’re afraid they’ll have targets on their backs because of their skin color.  And I feel these divisions too.  I grew up in what Jim Carville called the Alabama part of the state, in a very rural area – Hamburg, Pennsylvania, at that time population 3,000 or so if you count the chickens and cows along with the people -  but for the past 30 years have spent most of my time in or near the city of Philadelphia.   And I’m comfortable here.   As beautiful to look at as my home area is, I don’t get back to farm country much, and there are reasons for that.
 
Certainly as human beings we’re going to be more comfortable with some people and in some situations than others.  But when we say of someone else, “I have no need of him or her”, then our society starts to become untied.   As it’s becoming untied in Detroit, where roughly half of Detroit residents, because of inability to pay their bills, are threatened with having their water shut off – and the shutoffs are coming neighborhood by neighborhood, some 3,000 households a week.[1]  What happens to a city when nearly half the residents have no access to safe drinking water?  When America’s auto industry was booming, we had plenty need of Detroit then, but now we’re quick to say to the residents of Detroit, “I have no need of you.”  Or, closer to home, as our country has also said “I have no need of you” to large sections of Camden, NJ, once a center of manufacture but now in many neighborhoods an urban wasteland, where the drug trade and the scavenging of scrap metal are the two major sources of cash.  Or as our country has said, “I have no need of you” to any number of Philadelphia neighborhoods that were once humming with industrial activity, until the industrial jobs went overseas.  Or, looking very close to home indeed, when churches band together to feed poor residents of Port Richmond and Bridesburg, and neighbors object to the food cupboard, might not those neighbors be telling those getting help at the cupboard, “I have no need of you.”
 
We Americans have taken our historical declaration of Independence from Britain very much to heart.  We’re very individualistic, looking at policies in terms of how they affect ourselves or perhaps our immediate families, with much less consideration to how they affect those further from us.  But while we are indeed independent from Great Britain, our Scripture reading today reminds us that we are dependent on God, and interdependent – that is to say, mutually dependent - on one another.  What we do affects others, and what others do affects us. 
 
Our Gospel reading today goes off in several different directions, but it ends with Jesus inviting us,  “Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me; for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light."  We might well wonder, looking at Jesus’ life, how he could call his burden light.  I would say that the burden is light because Jesus is helping carry it.  To live in isolation apart from Christ and community is to carry a heavy burden indeed, and we inevitably end up carrying burdens we were never meant to carry.  But to live in community – to live as part of the body of Christ, with Jesus at the head – is to carry the burden we were intended to carry, to live as we were intended to live.
 
“Now you are the body of Christ and individually members of it,” Paul wrote.  May we at Emanuel Church live as those connected to Christ and one another, and reach out in love to those who are not yet part of the body with words of good news and deeds of love.  Amen.


[1] http://www.theguardian.com/environment/true-north/2014/jun/25/detroits-water-war-a-tap-shut-off-that-could-impact-300000-people
 

      

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