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April 8, 2019 · Lent · Year C

Woe to contentment (Lenten Journeys Luke13 and Luke6)

Luke 13:31-35 and Psalm 27 anchor this Lenten reflection on the danger of spiritual complacency. The sermon calls congregants out of contentment and into the ongoing, unfinished work of faithful discipleship.

Scripture:Luke 13 · Luke 6 · Luke 13:31-35 · Psalms 27 · Genesis 15:17

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Woe to contentment: Our work is not yet done.
Tony E Dillon Hansen

Reflection based upon Luke 13:31-35; Psalm 27; Genesis 15:17

Let us be in state of prayer. From Psalm 19, May the words of my mouth and the meditations of all of our hearts be acceptable in your sight O Lord You are our rock and our Redeemer!

Happy Lent!! 

In this time of Lent, we are positioned to reflect and think about our lives, what we miss, and what we could improve. 

As we continue on this journey through Lent , you could still consider prohibitions -- like abstaining from chocolates, Facebook, adult beverages, swearing (I have heard some of you and you know who you are) or something like that. Yes, I have my own practice. If you have one, great! if you don’t, I would like for you to consider adding something to your lives this season.

I submit to you to review and consider with me the sermon on the plain to serve as guideposts for our journey this year.  As I was working with the text, I saw the potential for gifts and focus points for each week -- even each day.  I hope you will as well.

So let us consider our current lesson that talks about this conversation with Jesus and put that in context of first part of that sermon on the plain.  So the question to ask is, what does a fox, the city of Jerusalem and woes have in common?  (In my goofy, dry sense of humor, that starts to sound like the beginning of a good joke.)

Let the spirit move us as it did Jesus.

Jesus is approached by some Pharisees that “warn” Jesus about Herod. This is kind of interesting, in of itself, because we have a set of elites warning Jesus about other elites. In the words of Robin Hood, as played by the wise Daffy Duck, “somethings amiss here.”

What does Jesus do? Calls out the boloney. Then tells them and all present, I am on my mission (ministry) and no one will prevent me from doing God’s work.  Further, you may not recognize Jesus’s work as it happens, but soon enough you will.

In this passage, we see one of Luke’s chief concerns is that of hypocrisy.  Here, Jesus laments over people’s attitudes towards the hypocrisy of the political elites, the religious elites here and the people who contently follow them. What is Jesus saying to us?

That might be best explained when we look back a few chapters -- using our section of the sermon on plain. Last week, our group walked together through first part of this Lenten journey through the sermon on the plain.  Allow me to recap.
We reviewed some of the beatitudes (blessed are the poor and the meek, for your reward is coming) essentially can be summarized to three points:

1)Blessed are you who seek the Truth! 2) Trust in God 3) because you are not alone. 

Further that reward is the kingdom of God. I submit to you that God does not want us to wait until death to participate.

Jesus’s sermon on the level place then brings us to some woes.

“…woe to you who are rich,
    …who are full now,
    for you will be hungry.
“…you who are laughing now,
    for you will … weep.

What are these woes? Woes against pleasure, no! These are woes against contentment.  Yes, we are blessed when we seek and trust in God, but we must be careful not to fall into the trap of contentment because contentment is a fleeting illusion.  In fact, contentment can lead to a form of idolatry rather than as venerating certain icons, money or personal success, but we are want to let these and worldly treasures prevent us from continuing to do what we are called to do. 

We have this throughout our lives, and I have a few examples where I have fallen short on this notion. Let me illustrate one.

I was reminded of this when watching the film Christopher Robin (a story about the Pooh, Tigger and Eeyore characters and the Hundred Acres Woods.) When I, as a father, am called to be a father for Tyler or to be a spouse to my love, yet when work calls, I too often felt compelled to switch gears and that became my focus for a day, evening or weekend. How many times have I missed something because I just did not do what I was called to do over an presumption of importance: an illusion of importance.  Even recently, I found myself in the middle of a project go-live and working an over-abundance of overtime to see successful objectives.  Yet, at what cost?

To consider this even more the irony is that it might have been easier to spend time with my family “doing nothing” than spend time anchored to my desk.  Perhaps it is necessary. Perhaps that is the purpose of holidays – even Jesus reminds us to take time for ourselves.

To counter these outside forces, I have intentionally enforced boundaries on these so that I might fulfill my promise and my call.

This is, however, more than just following through on a promise

It could have been easy for Jesus to hear the warning from the Pharisees here and stop what the mission and ministry, but that is not what God called of Jesus to do. Similarly, it could be easy for me or you to ignore truths in our society, especially when someone raises a potential warning and abandoned what we are called to do as followers of Christ.  That might be safe, that might be the compelling thing to do, but is it safe and is it worth our attention?
 
Why be content with saying the good words and then doing nothing with it? Why be content with just sitting in church when God calls us to do so much more.  We cannot be content with things because then we become the Jerusalem that Jesus laments -- while the fox takes from us, hides from and abuses power.

When you feel content with your Christian call today, you risk leaving the best part of yourself sitting in that pew when you leave worship and you risk not participating in God’s kingdom.

So What are we called to do that we are content ignoring? What are we substituting for what we are called to do; what God calls us to do?

Let us listen for a moment to some suggestions.

Over the past few years, I have grown quite a bit more faith in our youth. In fact, I would say that they have re-invigorated some of my work in the public sphere, and the youth are genuinely exciting me to do work!
The youth over the past few years have been calling out the fallacy of a broken system that seems designed to quiet us.  Perhaps this is one reason why Jesus calls upon us to listen to children because they have not understood our cultural ignorance as their own. Recently, they have been calling us to a truth with no place for contentment for what we think is “normal.”

Is it really ok to feel numb to another school shooting? 
Is it really ok to ruin God’s creation: our Earth: their future home?
Is it really ok to deny someone their justice, fairness or equality, whether immigrant, queer, black or blue?
Is it really ok to ignore the PTSD of honorable men and women returning from wars?
Is it really ok to be that normal?

The youth are compelling us to look at where we are -- just as Jesus does in these two pieces. 

They are calling out the fox and calling out Jerusalem - less we be that fox.

Let me put it another way.
My mother taught me a lesson once that when you move out of an apartment or house to leave it in better condition than we received it. Can we say that about our world and our youth – when we are content with “it is what it is”?

We, who do nothing, to prepare our world for them better than we received it do nothing to help our youth.

Perhaps, instead of busying ourselves with who should not be part of our community,
Perhaps, instead of nodding to rhetoric and ego, or violence as a way of life
Perhaps instead of forgetting what we are call to do
Perhaps instead of finding excuses to put off to tomorrow,
Perhaps then we do what the youth are calling us to do !
Perhaps then we do the work that is our mission as Christians – no matter who you are or where you are on life’s journey.
We do not have to agree on everything but we don’t have to argue over the scraps dropped from the table of power.
We do not have to make excuses for them.
Like Christopher Robin, we can remember who we are and why we are here.
What is truly important in our lives is not just facades or worldly treasures,
But what God calls us to do for ourselves, our family, and our world.

No we don’t have to fight over scraps, rhetoric and illusions.
Let us listen to our youth.
I see the good Lord working through them and filling us with hope
That has long been forgotten.

We can be what God has invited us to be and to do his good work.

Again, Blessed are those who seek the Truth
Trust in God
Because you are not Alone.
Be mindful of contentment because
God is calling you to continue the good work.

“Blessed is the one who comes in the name off the Lord.” Luke 13:35
Is that you?

Thanks be to God!