Sunday, November 4, 2018

Safe At Home

Scriptures:     Isaiah 25:6-9,     Psalm 24,   Revelation 21:1-6a,     John 11:32-53



Today is All Saints Day – in the German tradition, Totenfest – when we remember our departed loved ones, family members and friends and members of this congregation and of the wider church who have gone on to be with the Lord. A number of them are listed in the bulletin – but we all know many, many more whose names and memories we hold in our hearts, far too many to name at any one time.  It is on occasions such as All Saints that we truly remember how interconnected our lives are, how much our lives impact one another.  We do not live only for ourselves nor do our deaths affect only ourselves.  All of us hold memories of our loved ones who have passed – tender moments, funny stories – and sometimes sad memories as well, moments of misunderstanding and tension.  All these memories, for good and bad, are a part of what made our loved ones the unique individuals they were – and in God’s sight, still are.

The lives of our loved ones, and the memories we hold, the stories we tell about them are not only a part of our individual stories and the story of our church, but they are part of something much bigger, the “Great Story” of faith that began in the Garden of Eden and continues to this day, and will continue until time becomes eternity and we shall be with the Lord.  Many of you, especially the longtime members, have told me stories of those who shaped your faith – faithful ministers like Pastor Steinberg and Sunday School teachers like Mr. Bauer, stories of the members of the church who welcomed you when you came here as children – some of you clutching the nickels your parents gave you for Sunday school – and many of the longtimers still remember the verses you memorized for your confirmation, and who else was in your confirmation class.   And so the faith of those pastors and teachers lives on in you, in us.  On one level, our lives are fleeting – as the book of James says, we are like a mist that is here today and gone tomorrow.  But in God’s eyes, our lives, our stories, and those of our loved ones hold eternal significance.

We encounter in our Gospel a story of eternal significance that begins as a family story.
In our Gospel reading, we hear about another family devastated by grief, two sisters, Mary and Martha, and their brother Lazarus, who live in Bethany, a town two miles outside Jerusalem.  We’re told that Jesus had a special love for this family.   Word came to Jesus that Lazarus was ill…but strangely, Jesus delayed two days in going to see them.  By the time he makes his way to Bethany, Lazarus has died, and has been in the grave for four days.  That detail of four days is significant.  In the Jewish thought of the day, it was believed that the spirit of one recently deceased hovered over the body for three days, and then departed.  And so the fact that Lazarus had been dead four days meant he was truly dead, at a point of no return, at a point of no hope.

 He encounters first Martha and then Mary, and both say the same thing, “If only you’d been here, our brother would not have died.”  If only. But even in this situation of no hope, Martha hangs onto a sliver of hope, “Even now, I know that God will give you whatever you ask him.”  And Jesus says, “Your brother will rise again.”  Martha says, “Yes, I know, he’ll rise at the resurrection on the last day.”  And Jesus says to Martha, “I am the resurrection and the life.  Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die. Do you believe this?”  Jesus says to Martha, basically, I’ve got this.  Do you trust me?  When he encounters the mourners, Jesus weeps – but then asks those there to roll away the stone, and raises Lazarus with the words, “Lazarus, come forth!” With those words, we’re told Lazarus came out of the tomb, graveclothes and all, likely looking like something out of The Mummy.   We’re told that after the raising of Lazarus, Mary and Martha and Lazarus gave a dinner for Jesus….and we’re also told that the religious authorities had plotted to kill Lazarus, just as they had been plotting to kill Jesus – but then we’re not told anything further about Lazarus.  And what does it say about these religious leaders that they are so threatened by Jesus that they prefer death to life, at least for Jesus and for Lazarus.  And, as an aside, are there times in our lives when what looks like a mortal threat may be seen, from another angle, as God’s way of bringing about new life.

This is a story of how God provided comfort in time of grief. This is a story of the saints of God….and on All Saints Day, we remember our saints – not only the famous saints such as St. Francis and St. Patrick, or St. Oscar Romero of El Salvador, who was just recently declared a saint of the Roman Catholic church, but all those anonymous but faithful people who have lived and died in the faith. 

We all have our own stories of how God has comforted us in times of grief.  It’s so hard to let go when a loved one goes to be with the Lord.  My father died just as I was beginning my time as pastor here at Emanuel….he’d been on dialysis for several years due to kidney failure, and then developed pancreatic cancer.  The pain of his pancreatic cancer quickly became more than he could live with, and so he stopped dialysis, and with the assistance of home hospice, he passed peacefully.   It went very quickly – Thanksgiving weekend 2007 my dad had been up patching a hole in the roof of his workshop, and by early January 2008 he was gone…..just a little over a month.    After he passed, I discovered by chance that I still had a voicemail from him on my cell phone….just a mundane voicemail from a few months before his death, saying he’d left the dialysis center and was going home, and he’d call back later.  Over the course of coming months, when I missed my dad, occasionally I’d play that voicemail.   Eventually the inevitable happened – after playing the voicemail, at the end, instead of hitting save, I hit delete, and so I accidentally erased it – and I guess it was at that moment when I could no longer play back that voicemail that I finally had to let go of my father for good.  But I also realized that, as much as I missed my dad, I wouldn’t have wanted him back as he’d been….the voice on that voicemail sounded old and tired, bone-weary tired, utterly drained, exhausted, and I wouldn’t want him back if it meant more suffering.  Finally I had to believe for myself the same thing I’d often told others, that all the suffering of his last few years was finally over, that he was in a better place, that he was with God – and for me, that was enough, and that is enough.  Jesus said, “I am the resurrection and the life…do you believe?”   Jesus telling me, “I’ve got this.  Do you trust me?”  It was enough for Martha, and it’s enough for me.

At a UCC meeting a number of years ago, the keynote speaker, Amy-Jill Levine, a noted Jewish author who wrote a book about Jesus called “The Misunderstood Jew”, said that Christianity was like football – the goal is to get into the endzone, into heaven – while Judaism is like baseball, where the batter is trying to get home – for the author, this is a reference to Jews needing to have a land to call home.  But as I was preparing this sermon, while I appreciated the point Amy-Jill Levine had made, I thought the baseball analogy also applied to Christians.   When we are born, we come from God, and when we pass from this life, we go back to God.  We’re remembered for what we do while we’re here – just as a baseball player is remembered or maybe forgotten based on his success in rounding the bases and playing in the outfield and such.  But those who pass from this life to be with the Lord, really are in essence going home. 

And what a home!  Our reading from Isaiah pictures our eternal home as a mountaintop on which is held a banquet, with rich food and well-aged wines.  Perhaps for us it doesn’t sound that impressive, but for Isaiah’s original readers, who were impoverished and frequently didn’t know where their next meal was coming from, the picture of an eternal banquet where there was always plentiful food and drink would have been compelling.  And then, Isaiah says that on this mountaintop, God will destroy the shroud of death that is cast over all people.  In our reading from Revelation, the writer gives us an amazing vision – “the holy city, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. And I” – that is, John, the author – “heard a loud voice from the throne saying, ‘See, the home of God is among mortals. He will dwell with them; they will be his peoples, and God himself will be with them; he will wipe away every tear from their eyes.  Death will be no more; mourning and crying and pain will be no more, for the first things have passed away.’  And the one who was seated on the throne said, ‘See, I am making all things new.’ 

That’s the promise we remember on this All Saints day.  That’s the hope we cling to, that though we are but strangers and sojourners in this life, God has a home prepared for us, where we will live on in God’s presence.  May our words and actions bring glory to God and live on in the lives of those around us, until we are all safe at home indeed with God. Amen.

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