Sunday, September 17, 2023

Put The Woman Down And Don’t Drink The Rat Poison

After helping her to cross the river, will you put the woman down?


Genesis 50:15-21
Psalm 103:(1-7), 8-13
Romans 14:1-12
Matthew 18:21-35

©The Rev. Seth Olson 2023

I once heard a comedian talking about his day-to-day interactions with a significant other. Like many romantic relationships, some of the things that his partner did got on the comedian’s nerves and vice versa. In relationships those things that are sweet, cute, and unique in the beginning can become neurotic, narcissistic, or nerve wracking down the road. Yet, this comedian would not immediately say something to his girlfriend about the annoying behavior. Instead, he would wait—storing up the grievances like arrows in an archer’s quiver. Then, when she came back from the bathroom saying, “Honey, you left the toilet seat up again,” he would launch into his savings of offenses… “Well, what about last week when you made me stop watching the game? Or the other day when you left the dishes for me to do even though I had cooked? How about the time you forgot to pick me up from the airport?”

Of course, I have never purposefully saved up a wrong done to me, so that I could hold it over someone else’s head (wink, wink). And, I am sure that you have never once withheld forgiveness. Even though we do not need to hear it, living and forgiving in community have been the focal points of the last two Sunday’s gospel readings. Last week the text focused upon a path to reconciliation: point out the fault by yourself, with one or two others if necessary, and with the whole church if you must, so to ensure that the one doing harm knows their hurtful actions and might amend the relationship. Today, we heard Peter asking Jesus how many times do we have to forgive someone who sins against us? Seven times?

Now, at first Peter’s estimate appears either too high or too low depending upon the relationship. There are some people we might click with from the moment we meet them. It would take a dramatic turn of events for them to need to seek forgiveness seven times. We all also probably know someone that gets underneath our skin from the word go, they might wrack up seven offenses against us in an afternoon. Often these are the people that we love the most. I have heard it said, if you would like a master’s degree in forgiveness, get married. If you want a doctorate in forgiveness, have children (or take care of them)! 

We experience forgiveness every Sunday when we hear the absolution after the Confession of Sins; however, forgiveness is not just something that we do when we kneel at church. This is a way of life, a daily choice that becomes more challenging the closer we come to other people within community. When Peter throws out his question he is asking more though, than just should we forgive people a certain number of times?

The original language comes across in a more complicated fashion depending upon one’s interpretation of the number seven within First Century Hebrew culture. “Should I forgive fully? Or, should I forgive others completely?” are two ways of translating Peter’s question. Another accurate way of posing this question to Jesus would have been, “Shall I forgive others always?” Jesus’ answer points beyond a base level of forgiveness, instead he exponentially multiplied the disciple’s mathematics, not seven times but seventy-seven times. For Jesus rote forgiveness or a limit to forgiveness does not cut it, those who follow his way practice wholistic forgiveness. But how? How can we possibly forgive fully? This is where today’s text turns towards a helpful if troubling tale.

We have a King who holds a servant’s debt that would make Jeff Bezos’ or Elon Musk’s net worth look small—the subject is in way over his head. So, he begs for forgiveness, and remarkably the King listens. Instead of going to jail, being required to work off the many lifetimes worth of debt, or being sold along with his family, the Monarch acts graciously forgiving the entire balance—not a sound financial practice, but an infinitely generous offer. The servant must be elated, right?

Nope! Instead, he turns around and tries to get money back from those who owe him, and when some other servants catch wind of it, they report this double standard to the Ruler. This is where the story gets a bit sus, as the kids say. The King who was abundantly gracious is now lavishly vengeful—even torturing the wicked servant—a rough look if the King is God’s stand in.

Now, most interpretations of this parable invite us to see that 1. The King is God, 2. The Servant is us, 3. God cancels away our insurmountable debts, and 4. We are to forgive others. This is all well and good, but what are we to do with the ending that makes God look more like a petty, tyrannical maniac and less like an eternally forgiving Father? To better understand Jesus here we have to go back to the question that Peter asked in the first place, how much, how completely must we forgive others? Jesus illustrated in this colorful ending that the stakes are astronomically high when we withhold forgiveness from others. God has forgiven you completely—now how will you respond? (This feels like a particularly appropriate question as we celebrate Nellie, Virginia, and Wiliam becoming members of Christ’s Body the Church in Holy Baptism today.)

Hopefully you, (these precious children), and I respond by living into the newfound freedom we receive in being forgiven, hopefully we connect relinquishing another’s debt against us with God’s wiping away our own debt, and hopefully we remember that these two aspects of forgiveness are forever intertwined.

However, if we ever forget, all we need to do is pray words that Jesus taught us, “Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.” These words, part of the Lord’ Prayer, from earlier in Matthew, we say every week during Holy Eucharist. In fact, this prayer is the only thing that is present in every single liturgy that we pray as a Church. The “Our Father” is so important that we pray it every time we gather together. Still, we may wonder, does God’s not forgive those who do not practice forgiveness with others? Hold onto that question, while I tell you one more story.

“Two monks on their way to the monastery found an exceedingly beautiful woman at the riverbank. Like them, she wished to cross the river, but the water was too high. So one of the monks lifted her onto his back and carried her across.

“His fellow monk was thoroughly scandalized. For two hours he berated [his brother] on his negligence in keeping [their rule of life]: Had he forgotten he was a monk? How did he dare touch a woman? And worse, carry her across the river? What would people say? Had he not brought their holy religion into disrepute? And so on.

“The offending monk patiently listened to the never-ending sermon. Finally he broke in with ‘Brother, I dropped that woman at the river. Are you still carrying her?’”[1]

We can scream at God and believe that God is the one that tortures us, but it is in not forgiving other’s debts that we torture ourselves. As Anne Lamott has written, “Not forgiving is like drinking rat poison then waiting for the rat to die.”[2] Put the woman down, don’t drink the rat poison, practice forgiveness. I bet you didn’t think you’d hear that in a sermon today.

Our task as Christians is to follow Jesus in the practice of loving one another. We practice this in how we choose to forgive each other. As we experience complete forgiveness through God’s mercy, we too are called to lavishly, abundantly, and completely forgive others. We will not always get forgiving others right, and when you miss the mark, I pray you will be able to forgive yourself too.

Do not store up a quiver full of grievances. Put down the woman. Don’t drink the rat poison. Forgive as God forgives you. Forgive your parents, siblings, children, grandchildren, friends, neighbors, enemies, and even yourself, for it is in forgiving others that we ourselves participate in the freedom of God’s mercy. And for that, thanks be to God. Amen.



[1] Mello, Anthony De. 1982. "The Monk and the Woman." In The Song of the Bird, by Anthony De Mello, 108. New York: Image Publishing Group.

[2] Anne Lamott, Traveling Mercies: Some Thoughts on Faith, (New York: Knopf Doubleday Publishing, 1999).

 

Sunday, September 3, 2023

Solving for X, Where X = Messiah

The Cross is not an event long ago, we still are called to go with Jesus where suffering persists.

 

Jeremiah 15:15-21
Psalm 26:1-8
Romans 12:9-21
Matthew 16:21-28

©The Rev. Seth Olson 2023

Holy God, let my words be your words and when my words are not your words, let your people be wise enough to know the same. Amen.

Back in grade school, Algebra was my favorite math class. I lacked the gift of spatial imagination for Geometry. Trigonometry never quite agreed with my brain. Algebra though—that was my sweet spot! Theoretical enough to excite my inquisitive nature and straightforward enough not to make my head hurt. I still recall the strange pleasure of solving for “X” on some particularly difficult questions in the pressure moment of a final exam. You may be thinking, this guy is a nerd—and while you are quite right—algebraic thinking actually aides us in understanding today’s Gospel lesson. Stick with me, I promise I will make it easier—and maybe even a little more fun—than a math class.

Let’s start with a warmup question. 2 + X = 4. To solve this, we try to isolate the X on one side of the equation, and we do this by subtracting 2 from both sides. In this case we discover that X = 2. You probably did not need any algebraic training to tell you that that 2 + 2 = 4. Still, this way of thinking is a useful skill when we happen upon a problem like in today’s story from Matthew. It seems we have the end of an answer, but we are missing a component that leads us to that answer. To put it into the language of an algebra problem: Jesus + Suffering = X. To discover the answer we actually have to link back to last week’s Gospel lesson.

In the previous text, Jesus asked his disciples, “Who do you all say that I am?” Peter boldly replied, “You are the Messiah, the Son of the Living God.” Ding! Ding! Ding! Peter got it right, at least at first. As we turn the page over to today’s story, which picks up soon after Peter’s affirmation, we find that this disciple is taking Jesus aside saying, “God forbid [you undergo suffering or death]! This must never happen to you.” Jesus recoiled at his disciple like a venomous viper, “Get behind me Satan. You are a stumbling block to me; for you are setting your mind not on divine things but on human things.” You may wonder, why was Jesus so angry? The answer lies in our algebra problem.

Jesus + Suffering = X. The X is already on one side of the equation by itself, so we don’t have to move it, but Peter was trying to remove something from the equation nonetheless—he wanted to take away suffering from Jesus. Regardless of the disciple’s protestation, Jesus knew he was not only to undergo suffering, but also death and eventually after three days resurrection. Jesus + Suffering + Death + Resurrection = X. Peter already solved the problem for us last week, and I bet you also know the answer. “X” equals Messiah. The trouble is that while Peter named Jesus as the Messiah, he also wanted Jesus to be a certain type of Messiah.

On the surface, the disciple wanted what was best for his teacher—not to undergo suffering. If the world had been different, if people at that time—human beings fascinated with power, pleasure, and privilege; people not unlike us—if those back then had supported Jesus, his teachings, and his identity as the Messiah, Peter’s desire would not have conflicted with Jesus’ mission!

We may even wonder, could God have done things differently or could Jesus’ Messiahship have gone in another direction? Of course, this is God we are talking about here! And yet, something different did not happen. We are made very good in the image of God, but we do not always live into this truth. In today’s story of Jesus, we see this in the powers of that day—religious, political, social, and otherwise—not accepting who Jesus was—the Son of God, born of a woman, the Savior who came to set us free. Without acceptance of this truth, God’s plan of salvation was not so easily achieved.

Jesus healed, fed, and taught things like, “God loves you. And if God loves you, you are now called to love God, to love your neighbor, and to love yourself,” but this was not enough. Instead, the way Jesus lived into his true identity, as the Messiah—the anointed one set apart to redeem the world—lead down a dangerously challenging path.

For God to show divine love for us human beings—no matter what—something else, some other variable, had to arise. This variable was so shocking that even Peter—the person who pegged Jesus as the Messiah—could not handle it. What was this variable? It was the most audacious, most profound, and most clear sign of God’s love for us. It was what Jesus pointed to in today’s Gospel lesson—the Cross.

The Cross was a hellacious torture device, designed not only to kill, but also to humiliate the convicted in the process. And yet, undergoing crucifixion was the way that God signified divine love for us, it was a way that God showed us that nothing can separate us from God. And, before you think this was simply something that Jesus did on our behalf long ago, know this: the Cross was, is, and will be not only the Way of Christ, but also our way. As the Daily Office puts it in the Collect for Fridays, “Mercifully grant that we, walking in the way of the cross, may find it none other than the way of life and peace” (The Book of Common Prayer, 99).

We are called to walk in this way now and always. As we do, I invite you to notice the shape of the cross anew. This device with intersecting beams was the way that God chose to intercede at a very particular time in human history. God Incarnate crashed into the humdrum, everyday-ness of our lives trying to heal, feed, and teach. How did we respond? We reacted as a species by betraying, torturing, and killing him. Jesus willingly faced this—emphatically emphasizing that nothing, not even our worst thoughts, feelings, actions, and behaviors—no, nothing will separate us from God’s divine love. Jesus’ arms extend from the hard wood of the cross into the past and into eternity. And so, God is with us always, but especially when we are persisting through hardship.

When our lives are difficult, when we are in the midst of suffering, when we stare death in the face, we do not do so alone. Our Messiah is with us always. Jesus was crucified once for all, but the love enacted on the Cross continues eternally. Thus, Jesus reigns on the throne of the Cross still whenever and wherever suffering persists.

Jesus is on the Cross with those in the wake of Hurricane Idalia, Maui wildfires, or Californian earthquakes. Jesus is on the Cross with all those who are facing hatred based upon their skin color, creed, sexual orientation, gender, or any other defining attribute. Jesus is on the Cross with all those who bear chronic pain, addiction, abuse, violence, or isolation. Jesus is on the Cross with all those who care for those in need and those who suffer for the sake of conscious.

Jesus is on the Cross with those who put themselves in harm’s way to protect the highest virtues and values of our country and our world. Jesus is on the Cross with the outcasts, the poor, the hungry, and the homeless. Jesus is on the Cross with you and me whenever we are hurt, broken, or abandoned.

Jesus is with us always, and this is supremely good news. And, there is more! This passage is not only about recognizing Jesus’ true identity as the Messiah. For once we accept this reality, we must see with clear eyes what Jesus’ Messiahship is. It is not being a warrior king—overpowering others, reigning on a golden throne, and coercing minions to follow arbitrary rules, which may have been Peter’s hope. Instead, Jesus was to be the Crucified Messiah. Meaning that God came to be with us not for power, prestige, or riches, but so that we might experience God’s grace—that is favor, undeserved and unearned. God gave us grace when we humans killed God Incarnate. This is a hard truth to confront, but as we do, we also have an opportunity to respond to this truth.

Jesus on earth walked with those who suffered, he now invites us to do the same. This is how we live into the truth that Jesus is our Messiah. We take up our crosses and move with him—going to the places where suffering lives. Offering healing and love to the hurting and pain of this world. It may be terrifying to enter these places of suffering both within and outside us. Still, to save our lives, we must give them away. In this paradoxical exchange we find something surprising—as we give away our lives to God, we receive new life in Christ. We are called by Christ to live in this brave space.

Jesus says to us, “If you want to become my followers, deny yourself and take up your cross and follow me.” May we claim Jesus as the Crucified Messiah who is with us always. May we be like Christ going where suffering persists. May we walk the way of the Cross—giving away our life, as we experience new life in Christ.