Sunday, March 24, 2019

Thirsty?

Scriptures:        Isaiah 55:1-9                             Psalm 63:1-8
I Corinthians 10:1-6, 9-13          Luke 13:1-9



In the 1980’s, the Partnership for a Drug Free America ran an ad showing a rat in a metal cage . The rat hits a lever, and down drops a white pellet. With increasingly alarming music playing in the background, the rat begins to chew on it, and as the rat chews on the pellet, the rat becomes clumsy, stumbling around the cage.  The rat chews on it some more, becoming clumsier still, to the point where it can barely move.  But the rat continues to return to the pellet, chewing off more…..eventually dying.  The voiceover for the ad says, “There’s one drug that is so addicting that 9 out of 10 lab rats will keep using…and using….and using…. Until death.   It’s called cocaine, and it can do the same thing to you.” [1] Experiments were done with rats alone in cages, some equipped with plain water, some with water spiked with cocaine.  The rats with the spiked water returned to it over and over, until they were addicted, eventually until they died.[2]
This morning’s Old Testament reading comes from the portion of Isaiah that Biblical scholars call “the Book of Comfort” – this section runs from Isaiah 40 roughly to Isaiah 55.  The early chapters of Isaiah, chapters 1 through 39, were written to warn the Jews that God was greatly displeased with them, and that if they continued on their course, they would meet with destruction – as happened when Babylon overran Jerusalem, destroying the city and temple.  But starting with Isaiah chapter 40, the tone shifts.   This section was written at the end of the Jew’s exile in Babylon, when Cyrus the Persian had conquered Babylon, and issued his famous decree  allowing the Jews to return home to Jerusalem.  The people had been in exile in a foreign land for decades, with the institutions that supported their culture long destroyed.  Few of the Jews who had been exiled all those decades ago were still living, and their children had no memory of what Jerusalem and its temple had been, only stories passed down from their parents.  Would those hand-me-down stories be enough to motivate people to return home?
Isaiah is urging his listeners to trust God and return to Jerusalem, and so what does he offer them?  A sermon, warning that God will punish them again if they mess up as they had in the past?  A lecture, with an accusatory finger pointed at them, reminding them of the sins that had led to their exile?  No, Isaiah offers them – a banquet invitation!  ‘Ho, come to the water! You with no money come, buy and eat. Buy wine and milk, without money and without price!  Why spend hard-earned money on that which is not food and does not satisfy? Listen carefully to me at eat what is nourishing.  Come and eat fine food!”  Isaiah’s invitation is like food and drink to starving people – and not just any food, not blue plate special food, not baked goods and vegetables that are past their sell-by date, but fine wine and top-drawer food.  For us, halfway through Lent, when many people fast or give up favorite food items, it may be jarring to hear this passage in which God through Isaiah is not just inviting but commanding his people to chow down on filet mignon and wash it down with their finest beverage of choice.  What’s more, Isaiah promises that they will be living so high that the surrounding nations will come running to them.   At this point, the  Tom Petty fans among us may remember the words “You don’t have to live like a refugee.”  And that’s basically Isaiah’ message to those who were refugees in Babylon – you don’t have to live like this.  God’s got something better for you. Of course, Isaiah warns that the invitation will not be extended indefinitely, as he cries, “Seek the Lord while he may be found, call unto him while he is near.  Let the wicked turn from their ways and the unrighteous from their evil thoughts.”  But even Isaiah’s warning is given, not to condemn, but to invite them to end self-destructive behavior so that their own lives can be lived more fully.
Isaiah’s words of hope were written to a people in exile.  We have an example of what exile looks like in our own congregation.  Our member Isaac came here as a refugee from Liberia.  He lives here in exile.  Even though he has put down roots here, he has not forgotten his homeland; he is active with groups of exiled Liberians to influence policy in Liberia, so that life will be better, if not for him, at least for his children.  But there are other ways to be in exile, with barriers other than distance standing between us and the lives we would like to live.  Our homeless members and near-homeless members are in a kind of economic exile in their own country, unable because of poverty to live with a sense of security, unsure even where their next meal is coming from, without a safe place to lay their head.   Others may have more economic security, but because of social policies live with the knowledge that all that can be taken away at an instant.  For example, there are no federal laws protecting LGBTQ persons against discrimination in housing and employment, and protection against discrimination in Pennsylvania is spotty at best, with Philadelphia and some other large cities offering robust protections while more rural communities offer little or nothing. In August 2018, the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission has interpreted existing law to afford more protection against discrimination, but what one administration enacts the next may strike down. LGBT persons live with the knowledge in the back of their minds of the grim reality that no matter how much security and comfort they may have at any present, the carpet could be pulled out from under them at any moment, that everything can be taken from them at the stroke of a pen.
Beyond these specific examples, many of us live with barriers between us and the lives we would like to be living.   Our employment and housing opportunities may be limited by bad references and bad credit ratings, by convictions and criminal records; our activities may be limited by health challenges; our sense of connectedness to others may be limited by broken relationships.  The pain caused by such barriers, such limitations, may lead us to make unhealthy choices – if not drugs or alcohol, we may turn to other pacifiers such as overeating or other forms of excessive consumption, or smoking, or gambling, or overwork – all substances or behaviors that we know are unhealthy, but that may distract us from the pain, at least in the moment. Isaiah called his listeners to turn from spending their money on that which is not food, on that which does not satisfy.  He told his listeners , “You don’t have to live like a refugee.”  Our reading from Isaiah reminds us that against all these limitations, God offers us, not a lecture, but an invitation to a better life, an invitation to turn away from isolation and turn toward life among God’s people, among the beloved community, where from the community’s resources we can feed and clothe and shelter, and educate and embrace and protect – and give our members a firm enough foundation, a place to stand on, so that they can turn away from unhealthy pacifiers and self-destructive behavior.
Earlier, I mentioned the experiments around rats and addiction, that a rat in a cage with access to cocaine will use it repeatedly and become addicted.  Bruce Alexander had done research in the 1970’s with rats and cocaine, but took his research in a different direction.  He realized that existing experiments involved rats – which are social animals - isolated in cold metal cages, with nothing but the addictive substance as a diversion.  He constructed what he called “rat park”, with everything a rat could want, with plentiful food, places to hide, and places to run, and places to gather, and put small groups of lab rats in his rat park.  Among other options for food and water, Alexander made water spiked with cocaine available to the lab rats…..but, he found, the rats just weren’t that interested.  Rat park offered enough other forms of stimulation and community that the spiked water just wasn’t all that enticing.   He then introduced addicted lab rats from earlier experiments into “rat park”…..and while they went through withdrawal, afterward they were able to join with the other rats, without recourse to the cocaine-spiked water.  Alexander’s conclusion was that addiction among his rats wasn’t an inevitable result of consuming cocaine, but a response to being isolated in a cage with no other forms of stimulation….more broadly, to isolation and miserable living conditions, with cocaine-spiked water as the only respite.  In looking back on those Rat Park experiments 40 years later, Alexander writes, “The view of addiction from Rat Park is that today’s flood of addiction is occurring because our hyperindividualistic, hypercompetitive, frantic, crisis-ridden society makes most people feel social[ly] and culturally isolated. Chronic isolation causes people to look for relief. They find temporary relief in addiction to drugs or any of a thousand other habits and pursuits because addiction allows them to escape from their feelings, to deaden their senses, and to experience an addictive lifestyle as a substitute for a full life.” .[3]  Of course, Alexander’s suggestion runs counter to US policy; after a 40 year war on drugs and 40  years of tough on crime policies, under administrations of both major political parties, we have more people isolated from society by means of incarceration - over 2 million – than any other country In the world, more than China whose population is roughly four times our population, far more than Russia.[4]  We have the highest rate of incarceration – roughly 650 per 100,000 population , or put another way roughly 2/3 of 1% of the population in prison at any given time – more than any other country – and after all that, we  have an epidemic of opioid abuse; our country is  so overflowing with drugs it’s practically dripping out of our eyeballs. The so-called war on drugs has left our country swamped with drugs. [Maybe we should declare a war on chocolate instead, so that we can be floating on a sea of chocolate instead of drowning in an ocean of opioids?]  While turning a blind eye to crime is no solution either, is it possible that rehabilitation with community support could more successfully bring healing both on an individual and a societal level?
In our Gospel reading, Jesus is discussing the events of the day with his listeners.  Pilate had some worshipers executed, and the crowd wanted to know if this was punishment from God because they had been especially sinful.  Jesus came back with an example of his own – a tower fell on some people, killing them – and asked the crowd if they were worse sinners than anyone else.  Jesus said no in both cases, that those executed by Pilate and those crushed by the tower were not worse sinners than anyone else – but that the crowd shouldn’t feel smug because they had been spared these calamities, that it was only by God’s grace that they were still standing, and that if they didn’t turn their lives around, death in one form or another awaited them as well.
He then told a story that we might call “the parable of the impatient landowner.”  The owner of a plot of land walked up to his gardener, pointed out a three-year-old fig tree that had borne no fruit, and demanded that it be cut down to make the ground available for other use.  The gardener pleaded with the landowner to give the tree one more year.  In preparing this sermon I learned that while many fig trees bear fruit after two years, some may take as long as six years to produce figs – it’s a matter of the fig tree’s own maturing process as well as the quality of the soil.  The gardener asked for one more year, and said that he’d give the tree some extra TLC – turning the soil, adding fertilizer in the form of manure.  The gardener wanted the tree to have the most favorable conditions possible to be productive.  And, he told the landowner, if that doesn’t work, next year you can cut the tree down. 
In response to an unproductive tree, the gardener offered, not punishment in the form of cutting down the tree, but grace, in the form of additional time and care.  This is actually what reminded me of what I had read some time ago about the Rat Park experiment, that isolation seemed to feed addiction, while the grace that the lab rats experienced in Rat Park seemed to lead them away from addiction.  Now, we can respond to grace either with gratitude or with entitlement, and Jesus recognized this when he told his listeners that the fact that they hadn’t experienced calamity wasn’t necessarily a reward for good behavior, but grace from God to which they should respond by repenting and changing the course of their lives.  In the same way, while proponents of the prosperity gospel tell us that good fortune is God’s reward for our faithfulness, Jesus is telling us that our good fortune may just be God’s grace given to us in hopes that our behavior will change.  At the same time, perhaps grace – not turning a blind eye to bad behavior, but engagement, education and rehabilitation - rather than punishment should be our response to disappointing behavior from others.
“Ho, all you who are thirsty, come to the waters,” Isaiah invited the Jewish exiles in Babylon….and invites all who are in exile from living life to the full.  “Why spend your money on that which does not satisfy?”, Isaiah asked the exiles – and asks us. “You don’t have to live like a refugee!” is the  message of our readings today.  May we turn from our addictions and pacifiers, and turn toward Jesus, who offers us living water and the bread of life.  And may we invite others to come to the waters, invite others to eat the bread of heaven, and feed until they want no more.  Amen.







[1] This can be seen on the Youtube video “Cocaine Rat – Drug Free America”, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7kS72J5Nlm8
[2] https://www.huffingtonpost.com/johann-hari/the-real-cause-of-addicti_b_6506936.html
[3] http://brucekalexander.com/articles-speeches/rat-park/148-addiction-the-view-from-rat-park
[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_incarceration_rate

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