Showing posts with label Light. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Light. Show all posts

Friday, February 10, 2017

You Are the Salt of the Earth, Matthew 5:13-20



“You are the salt of the earth!”

“You are the light of the world.”

“Your righteousness will exceed the righteousness of the scribes and the Pharisees.”

As we begin, let us remember who the gathered people are in today’s Gospel reading. These are the people who have come from all of Syria, Galilee, Jerusalem, Judea, and the land beyond the Jordan. They are the diseased, the infirm, the mentally ill, the epileptics, and the paralyzed with their care takers. They are the outcasts, the forgotten, the trampled on, the hidden, the invisible ones of society; and they have followed Jesus up the side of the mountain. These are the first people Jesus tells, “You are the salt of the earth!”

A few years ago, I read a book called Salt: A World History. It begins with some interesting points. One is that, if we don’t eat enough salt, in a year, we die. We have no way of making salt in our systems so we must find it elsewhere in the world. Indeed, much of human history is consumed with knowing where salt can be found. It is so fundamental to our world that one of the things we still depend on, our salary, comes from the word for salt. Roman soldiers were partially paid in salt, hence, they received their salary.

Another point is it is thought that we became such good hunters because we first tracked other animals who could smell salt and were seeking salt themselves, and then we killed and ate them when they had found the salt to preserve it for ourselves. One of the reasons that the Hebrew people settled near the Dead Sea, the lowest point on the earth, is because they could mine the salt cliffs and evaporate salt from the sea. It had great value, almost as much value as water.

As time went by, we found that salt was a great preservative. One way to keep salt in our diets, therefore, was to carry salt in our meats, vegetables, and these amazing dairy products called butter and cheese. Salt was important because it meant that we had to worry less about food poisoning, but, mostly, the preserved foods became convenient ways to make sure that we had that most basic dietary need covered. WE had salt. And today we hear that this tattered crowd, the spoils of society, gathered on a hillside, are the salt of the earth. They are a basic need of our society.

Then Jesus tells this group, many of whom had leprosy and other crippling diseases, “You are the light of the world,” light—another thing we need to survive and prosper. Natural light provides vitamin D which gives us strong bones and healthy upright postures. It prevents rickets and helps produce healthy skin tissue.

And artificial light is very dear at the time. It is expensive and not always available. At the time Jesus declares these people are valuable, the cost of fifteen minutes of artificial lamp oil cost about a day’s salary. (Just think about how high our light bill would be these days if that were still true.) But this light that Jesus is speaking of is not artificial light. It is the true light from heaven that shines through us, and yet, it is not our light, it is shared light. This light that is being named comes from Christ’s self and is about to change the world. 

These words are particularly good news to the crowd because these people are ones who have been trampled on most of their lives. They have been covered up and ignored. They have been pushed aside and hidden away in segregated parts of their world, and now they are being told that they are the essential ingredients for life itself. No longer are they to be tasteless, trampled people. No longer are they to skulk around in the dark corners. Jesus tells them to stand up and be counted, not hidden under a bushel basket. They are to be part of the fulfillment of God’s great creation. They are to be valued as God’s people gathered for the sake of the world.

These people who have been blessed, who have known God’s presence in their lives, are now being told what it means to be identified as a disciple. Again, it means that they need to stand up and be counted; they should not allow themselves to be covered up, hid from the world; but they are to find their place on the lamp stand, the cross arms of the empty resurrection cross. These, indeed, are the words of revolution.

This revolution will take place in a way that says that the law cannot be thrown down, that one cannot freely go out rampantly disregarding the value of others, but that the law might be fulfilled. Jesus says, I have not come to abolish the law, but to fulfill it, to overwhelm it. The word in Greek is πληρόω (pleróō).  It means to be filled up to overflowing, like a woman’s womb when she is pregnant. Think about it, this fulfillment of the law is not only going to fill the space, but it is going to grow until it is so big that it has to come out into the world we live in. It is going to overwhelm the world. It is going to overflow into our world like Amos’ mighty streams of justice from the living waters of the baptismal font into the places where we work and live. Jesus says, I have not come to abolish the law, but to fulfill it, to make it pregnant, to make it flow over all of God’s people as the waters of the sea cover the ocean.

In this light, if you will excuse the pun, the fulfillment of the law is the demand that all of God’s children be able to participate in the kingdom of heaven, and that, yes, if we work to be inclusive of all of God’s children, then we will exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees who spent a great deal of time trying to discern who was in and who was out. This righteousness that we participate in is the righteousness of Christ himself, and this righteousness breaks the rules of the scribes and the Pharisees to fulfill the law so that all might be part of the kingdom of heaven. This is not a there-and-then kingdom of heaven, but a here-and-now kingdom of heaven that begins in the waters of Baptism and flows out through our lives. It is that divine place where we stand up and are counted as the children of God living for the sake of the world.

Let us continue to hold in our minds who is being spoken to. These are the ones who have been trampled underfoot. They are the ones who have lost their taste. They have all but lost their hope. The only hope they have is in the one who is seated on the hillside speaking to them and teaching them. So, it is not their saltiness that they are able to depend on, it is Christ’s saltiness.

They have been hidden away from the world, ignored, and shunned. They know it is not their light that is going to shine, but Christ’s light that will shine through them. They know their own righteousness has not gotten them anything, so it will be Christ’s righteousness that will prevail—the one who will die on the cross for their sins justifying them, making them right with Godself, the one who is raised up from the place of death into the world of everlasting, ever-living life in the kingdom of heaven that begins right now with the promise of the fullness, a πληρόω (pleróō) pregnant time of hope to come. It is not their righteousness. It is Christ’s righteousness that shows them the way to go. So, in all that they will do, it will be Christ that will do it, and through him, God’s kingdom, this kingdom of heaven will overflow into all that they and we do.

Now you might be saying to yourself, “This is wonderful for the people that heard Jesus speak and teach that day, but what about us today?” Some of you may identify with that broken group of people gathered on the hillside, but, if you can’t, I offer you a song I learned in Sunday School many years ago.

God sees the little sparrow fall,
It meets his tender view;
If God so loves the little birds,
I know God loves me too.
God loves me too, God loves me too,
I know God loves me too.
Because God loves the little birds, I know God loves me too.

God paints the lilies in the field,
And shapes each little bell;
If God so loves the little flowers,
I know we’re loved as well.
God loves us too, God loves us too,
I know God loves us too;
Because God loves the little glowers,
I know God loves us too.

God loves the lame, the deaf, the blind,
And offers life anew;
If God can love these hidden ones,
I know God loves us too.
God loves us too, God loves us too,
I know God loves us too;
Because God loves the hidden ones,
I know God loves us too.

God made the little birds and flowers,
And all things great and small;
God won’t forget his little ones,
I know God loves us all.
God loves us all. God loves us all.
I know God loves us all;
Because God loves the little ones,
I know God loves us all.

Saturday, February 4, 2017

Please Pass the Salt, OR What Color is Your Lamp Shade?


THE ANGELUS TRUMPET           STYLE

The Unexpurgated Source for Alternative Bible Facts

 

Please Pass the Salt, OR What Color is Your Lamp Shade?


February 5, 05:13:20

by Matt Hughes  


Who can forget Lot’s wife and the consequences of looking back? Yet in an ambiguous, even obfuscating, Orwellian double-speak statement, Joshua Kristy focused the crowd’s attention Saturday when he called them “salt of the earth.” Many people weren’t certain whether it was a compliment or the greatest slam.

Sources within the Kristy camp, however, made clarifying remarks stating that Kristy was speaking in “interior design short hand as-it-were.” It appears that “SALT” is an acronym for Stunning Alternative Lighting Treatments and to be “the SALT of the earth,” is simply a way of saying that you are fully living in your time and current trends. Apparently, to lose one’s saltiness and taste is simply a way of saying that people are not keeping up with current design trends and are totally out of fashion.

With this illuminating clarification, the rest of Kristy’s monologue concerning lighting and the basic rules of lighting in the home make much more sense.

  1. Unless you are trying for that night time glow on your garden paths, or night-lighting a hallway leading to the bathroom for safety’s sake, lights need to be up high.
  2. Bushel baskets are not effective light treatments unless you cut the bottoms out of them. With the bottoms removed, these baskets become quite attractive lamp shades creating an ambient glow as the light radiates through the natural intervals of the weave and, in some cases, enlivens the material itself.
  3. With LEDs, mini lights can be inserted into the shade creating images of constellations and representations of the cosmological multiverse we live in. By arranging several lamps in any given room, the full magnificence of our heavenly kingdom is displayed.
  4. These are not new rules for lighting, but they do enhance our lives creating attractive, even educational, opportunities for social gatherings.
  5. By adapting just a few of these SALT ideas, you can surpass the righteous work of designers in the past.

Mount  crowd members claim this SALT summit meeting to be enriching and savory. Trumpet financial consultants predict a significant bump in the lighting and underwater basket weaving industries. More to come as further analysis continues.

Monday, December 26, 2016

Light, in the Darkness, Shines John 1:1-14


During this Advent season, we have been talking about time. We have talked about discerning God’s time of coming, the wilderness times of our lives and the assurance of God’s presence, times of transition in new community in Christ’s healing presence, and time to love and to know God’s justice in the world. Today our time of waiting is over. It is now time to begin the conversation of how God has come to dwell among us and what that means for us in this time and place.

Many scholars think that the opening words in John shift our sense of time. No longer do we think of the day beginning in darkness, at sunset, as our first covenant Jewish ancestors did. Rather as Christians, we think of creation and our days as beginning with light. The gift of light is so great that we now order our lives with the event of sunrise.

Yes, all the Gospels push us in this direction. The Easter tomb is discovered by the women in that very early time of day when the dawn is just occurring thereby shifting Christian Sabbath from sunset Friday night through Saturday to sunrise Sunday morning and the rest of that day. Yet, with this focus on light, we lost something of God’s activity in our lives. In the Genesis account of creation, God’s work is done in the darkness of night, and then it is revealed in the light of day. The emphasis of time starting with light alters our thoughts about God’s activity in our lives and our relationship to creation.

This new way of thinking—that the day begins with the light and ends with the darkness—allows humanity to think that the gift of dominion means that we are the primary workers in the world. The world should bend to our will. This new way of thinking pushes the consideration of God’s activity in the world from being the initiating creator to being the janitorial service. God, like our parents when we are little, will come behind us and pick up the mess we make.

This thought of light being the most essential thing has dominated our thoughts on the Gospel of John so much that it has even influenced our translation of the text. Today in the NRSV we read, “The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it.” (1:5) As life and light have already been connected in the verses before, so now, the light shines into the darkness revealing the subversive machinations of an already corrupt world that has the potential of overpowering the light.

Though this understanding of creation can appeal to us today, it really appealed to Christians of the late first century. When the Church was under persecution, when Christians were being imprisoned for their faith, when Christians were being used as entertainment in the coliseum as cat food for leopards and lions, the world certainly appeared to be a particularly depraved and evil place. If good was going to come out of it, goodness would need to be injected into it. God’s goodness would need to come from outside creation to effect change. Right?

This way of thinking, that the world and all of creation was totally corrupt, was so popular and widespread among early Christianity that early Christian leaders gathered together to say that this is not how God works. God does not work from outside the world as a master puppeteer manipulating the strings of creation. Since the beginning, God always has and always will work within God’s established relationship with creation. God works through vulnerability not strength. God works in the midst of the poor, the disabled, and the disenfranchised, not the wealthy and the powerful. God does not show up like some Superman character who is “faster than a speeding bullet, more powerful than a locomotive, who can leap tall buildings in a single bound.” We do not raise our eyes to the heavens saying, “Look! It’s a bird, it’s a plane! No, it’s SuperChrist!” No, God does not work like Superman or any other super hero.

A careful reading in Greek of John 1:5 shows that our desire to have God work from the outside in has influenced how we translate this verse. The Greek does not say “The light shines in the darkness”. It literally says, “And the light, in the darkness, shines, and the darkness has not overcome it.” As long as the light shines, darkness, the absence of light, has no power. And it is in this place of darkness, of powerlessness, that God continues to create.

Through birth to Mary, God, in Christ, enters our lives. From a place of the absence of light, the darkness, God’s life-light shines out as a beacon to the world. From the darkness of the womb, a child is born. In the darkness of the world, a son is given who is the light and hope of all people. From the darkness of the tomb, new life begins, a wonderful counsellor, mighty Lord, prince of peace. Thus, we come to understand that our being and the being of all creation is life that proceeds from darkness with the Word of God; that the Word of God is revealed to us in the person of Jesus Christ; and that his life is the light of the world.

As light is the first thing created from the universal darkness of Genesis, so in John’s Gospel, light is created amid the darkness of the world. This light is not to expose the evil so much as it is to reveal the goodness of God’s work—the life, ministry, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. With John, we come to be a witness to that light and hope.

We, ourselves, are not the light, but we can bear witness to the light that is coming to the world, not from outside the world, but from within; not as the ultimate goodness conquering our evil, but as the illumined work of God’s handiwork. We can bear witness not just of a place in the future kingdom of God but of a place to live, in light and hope, here and now. This here and now place is not of our own will and making. It is not the will and making of governments. It is the foundational will of God that we should live in a just and peaceful world.

“And the Word became flesh and lived among us.” (v. 14) This simple English translation of “lived” does not quite capture the more complex Greek idea of “tented”, nor does it help us remember that God’s presence among God’s people was first recognized in the tent of the tabernacle in the wilderness. It does not help us imagine the wilderness times of our lives when we travel with God and how God travels with us. It does not really help us understand that God’s love for us and creation is so great that God comes into the midst of our communities to share in all of the problems of the world. Indeed “the Word became flesh and tented among us.” Christ does not come only to the privileged cities and wealthy neighborhoods. He comes to live among us with alcoholics, drug abusers, arthritics, the injured and the blind; knowing our joys and our sorrows, continuing to show us the light of hope to come.

We have seen his glory, and that glory continues to challenge and perplex us, to guide and lead us, teach and model God’s love for us and the world, full of grace and truth. With this grace and truth, we gain the persistence we need to continue telling our story of life through dying and rising in Baptism and receiving our sacred food of forgiveness and reconciliation with God. We continue to proclaim God’s word of grace-filled love and care for the world: God’s message of hope for the world.

How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of the messengers who announce peace, who bring good news, who announce salvation, who say to all the people: “God reigns; listen, lift up your voices and sing with joy for the world; the Lord is come; let earth receive her king!”