Monthly Archives: October 2023

Invitations

A retelling of Matthew 22:1-10.

Once upon a time there was a king, with a son he very much loved. The king’s son was to be married, with no expense spared. For when a king plans a wedding you know it’s going to be good.

The venue would be grand, the best in all the land. With the resources of an entire kingdom at his disposal, there was no limit on what this day could be.

Weddings of course require invitations, lists must be made. In this way the wedding would be like any other. Family was asked, aunts and uncles, nieces and nephews, grandkids aplenty. And the friends list? It was a sight to behold. The list was filled with VIPs, people to see and to be seen: kings and queens, princes and princesses, dukes and duchesses, diplomats, rabbis, priests, merchants of means.

List now finalized invitations were sent. The king hoped all invited could attend.

The decorations, clothing, music, drink and food were planned to perfection. A favored son of the kingdom was to be married, and what a banquet it would be. This celebration would be legendary, lore passed down from one generation to the next.

Preparations complete, the king sent messengers out, to let the invited know the joyous celebration would soon begin. Dinner was ready. Oxen and calves and the finest of foods, all there to enjoy. And if the wine happened to run out? No worries, the king joked, my son could whip something up 😉.

But then the strangest thing happened. The invited did not come. The friends and family, the dukes and diplomats, the merchants of means instead chose to stay home. They went about their business like it was any other day. They ignored the gathering entirely, as if it was of no importance at all. And worse? Some mocked the wedding, laughed at the king, mistreated his messengers.

Staring out at an empty banquet hall, with invitation list in hand, the king pictured where each person would have sat. Emotions rushed over him; sadness, disappointment, anger. The day was nothing he had hoped it would be.

The dining, drinking and dancing, so precisely planned, would have to wait.

For without guests, a party simply isn’t.

The king’s soul was crushed. Looking down at the invitation list, filled with no-shows, the king realized something. The system he’d relied on, of who’s invited and who isn’t, had failed him.

The New Plan
The celebration must go on, the king realized. Clearly filling the empty seats would require a different approach. Something must change.

For it was a new day.
Which called for a new way.
A John 3:16 moment, through and through.

The king, a creator at heart, was determined to make something out of nothing. He’d done it before. He’d do it again.

So he sent out his messengers, this time with a different assignment. Invite everyone you meet to the banquet. For this king so loved the whole world. There would be no exceptions. No lists made that exclude.

Not this time.

So the messengers went.
The messengers found.
The messengers invited.

On their journeys the messengers encountered all kinds of people not on that first list.

Some were sick, too ill to celebrate much of anything. Get them the finest doctors, the king declared, the best treatments in the land. Heal them, he said. Send the bill to me. Make sure you invite them too, the king reminded. And when they show up? Let them in.

Some the messengers encountered were hungry, living from meal to meal. That’s easy, the king thought. There’s plenty of food at the banquet. Tell them their stomachs will be filled. And they can take as much as they like home. When they show up open the doors. Let them in.

Looking at the old guest list with new eyes, the king realized entire swaths of people had been left off. We didn’t invite the gays and the lesbians the first time around? The king was embarrassed. They’re fabulous, he thought, the life of any good party. Go find them, invite them, and let them in!

A messenger then came back with some troubling news. The king learned, at the borders of his land, there were people being denied entrance. What? The king’s face became flush. Learning of this injustice he was furious. How did this happen? Invite them to the banquet! Let them in!

And all the others, with lives that definitely mattered, yet weren’t initially invited? Find them, the king said. Tell them of the grand celebration. Make sure they know they are wanted. That we hope and pray they attend. And when they show up? You know what to do, the king told the messengers. Roll out the red carpet. Open the palace doors wide.

Let them in.
Let them in.
Let them in.

The messengers did.
The people came.
A celebration ensued.

Before long the wedding hall was filled with guests, each there to celebrate a favored son. This son was, after all, what drew them together.

For it was then, and only then, that the grand banquet, complete with dining, drinking, dancing, unending joy, unending laughter, could begin.

Hereafter
The kingdom of heaven is like that wedding, Jesus reminds.

Filled with people, filled with surprises. Each person there filled with backstories our fallen human selves might initially judge. Therein lies the beauty of God’s kingdom. It is a judgement free zone, designed for all.

Our own wedding celebrations, by nature, have limits. There are bills to pay, mouths to feed, halls that fit only so many. Yet we recognize that it’s better to celebrate the most special of days without restriction, without limit, without exception.

To successfully marry the earthly and the divine, as has always been the plan, getting the invitation list just so might be toughest part of all.

Fortunately, we don’t have to wait until the heavenly hereafter to experience this grand banquet as originally designed. In fact, we’re called to take part in bringing about this kingdom on earth. Right here. Right now.

Today
We are called to help unify a colorful, eclectic, diverse creation that includes those with, those without. Called to live in perfect harmony with the Creator. All made possible thanks to the life, death, and resurrection of the Son. We are guided daily by the winds of the Spirit, pointing us wherever the Creator leads.

As we have our own grand celebration in the works – our Stewardship Gala on November 3 will be something – it’s worth mention: If you can’t afford to attend no worries. A generous member of St. John’s has offered to cover your cost, because we want all to attend. Just let us know and a ticket, for no charge, is yours. All are welcome, without exception.

As we pray for Israelis and Palestinians in a time of conflict may we be reminded: putting barriers up that separate never ends well. For we are called to invite each other to a shared banquet, at the same table, breaking bread together, drinking from the cup.

Blessed are the Peacemakers, Christ reminds.
For theirs is the kingdom of God.

Until we can sit down at the same table together that peace on earth will elude.

As we look at our own southern border the same is true. To cite President Ronald Regan during an important moment in history, here’s a thought, when it comes to our southern border:

President Biden, tear down this wall!

These walls perpetuate humanitarian crises.
Simply put, that is not of God.

For we are to expand who we invite into the kingdom to include more.

So rip up your lists that separate, fellow messengers.
Head out, tell everyone you find.
Share the good news of a grand celebration.

One we so hope all attend.
And when God’s beloved show up at the palace door,
You know what to do.

Heed the words of the King.

Throw wide the doors. And –

Let them in.
Let them in.
Let them in.

Authority Wins

In October of 1983 John Cougar Mellencamp released his seventh studio album, titled Uh-Huh. The album proved popular, and was later ranked by Rolling Stone as one of the top 40 Greatest Albums of the 80s. Uh-Huh features three Top 20 Billboard hits: Crumblin’ Down, Pink Houses, and the aptly named Authority Song.

This latter song got my attention as a kid – I was 8 years old when it was released – well on my way to being a teenager and the testing of limits. One way I did that in high school was by growing out my hair, mullet style, just like Mr. Mellencamp. That’s business in the front (short) and party in the back (long). And that’s about the only thing I’ve got in common with this hip musician 😊.

Over time Authority Song became a mantra for what it is to grow up in the midst of a rule-based, institutional world. Amid catchy lyrics and zippy guitar riffs it is a downright memorable tune. The chorus goes something like this…

I fight authority, authority always wins.
Well, I fight authority, authority always wins.

The video, released back when MTV actually played music videos, shows what John Cougar is fighting.

In it we watch him in a faux boxing match, duking it out with a professional boxer. There’s no way this skinny crooner is going to win this fight. Right outside the ring, various authorities sit in the front row. There is –

A rich woman, dressed to the nines;
A big business corporate type, smoking a cigar;
A military general, wearing official regalia.

Each seemingly rooting for him to lose.

As the fight continues, Mellencamp reaches out for help, asking this:

So I call up my preacher,
I say: “Gimme strength for Round 5”
He said: “You don’t need no strength,
you need to grow up, son”

It seems John Cougar, in this song at least,  is even fighting the church.

At one point in the video Mellencamp play-boxes with a younger version of himself. As the video ends, fight now over, the boy dusts off his shoulders, kinks his neck, looks back at the row of authorities. The boy then gives them a big cheesy grin and walks away. The message is clear. He doesn’t plan to give up fighting authority any time soon.

Scripture is absolutely filled with tussles surrounding questions of authority. From to one person or group pitted against the next and the next and the next, we constantly find ourselves duking it out with others, skirmishing over who is in charge.

It’s an important question – who exactly is calling the shots?

Keeping with the boxing metaphor, let’s consider how Jesus mixed it up with people bound to keep him down. The gospels contain more rounds than there is time to share here; those other bouts stories for another time.

Round 1
(Matthew 21:12-14)
Jesus arrives in Jerusalem. First stop: the temple. There he sees tables set up. Vendors busily selling their warez. The business types are seemingly everywhere. This angers Jesus enough to take action. He turns the tables on them, drives them out, calls them thieves.

My house is to be a house of prayer, Jesus shares. He then heals the blind and lame, making known this house is where we find healing too.

The religious elites and business-types are furious. Just who does this radical Rabbi think he is! We’re the ones calling the shots! Their wallets threatened – religion and business are in financial cahoots here – they realize something must change. As the bell rings Jesus won this round. But still, there is more to come.

Round 2
(Matthew 21:23-27)

The very next day the religious elites and business-types make their move.

We need to know something Jesus.
We can’t help but ask.

By what authority are you doing these things?
And who gave you this authority?

The goal of their query is simple. They sought to –

Diminish,
Shutdown,
Silence.

If they could back Christ into a corner, they could pummel him into submission. The religious elites and business types were the real authority after all. Right? They were sure of it.

Never shy about answering a question with a question, Jesus turns the tables on them once again, offering two questions of his own:

Did the baptism of John come from heaven?
Or was it of human origin?

Christ’s antagonists argued amongst themselves. If they said heaven, then Jesus was the true authority. Because when John baptized Jesus, they knew the heavens opened and God spoke, saying this is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased.

But if they said the baptism was of human origin there was this crowd to think about. The crowd very much thought John a prophet. The religious elites and business-types were afraid of the crowd, afraid of what they might do. This answer was no good either.

Stumped at Christ’s query, the religious elites and business types demurred. We do not know, they replied. Well, if you don’t know, Jesus concludes, I won’t be telling you. Christ had landed the final uppercut right before the bell rang. He had won this round as well. The fight continues.

Round 3
(Matthew 26 and 27)
The religious elites and business types found themselves gripped by fear. They –

Feared loss of power.
Feared loss of wealth.
Feared change.

Most of all they feared being exposed for who they were. Instead of looking out for the widows, the children, the foreigners, the marginalized, the blind, the lame, and those without, Christ made their true motives clear.

They had only been looking out for themselves.

Knowing they must do something, and fast, a plan quickly came together. They formed a new alliance, made up of –

Religious elites,
Business types,
Government.

They were sure that trifecta of power would win the day.

Then, with a –

Bribe,
Garden,
Kiss,

A new plot formed.

Soon it was a –

Denial,
Trial,
Cross.

And that was that. It was a knockout punch. The referee counted to ten. Jesus lay there, on the mat, lifeless. He was bruised, battered, bloodied. Human authority, it seems, had won. The final bell, as far as anyone could tell, had rung.

Round 4?
(Matthew 28)

Wait, isn’t this fight over? As an Easter people we know better.

With –

One gardener,
Two Mary’s,
Three days,

There was revelation.
Jesus was back, baby.

He is risen!
He is risen indeed!
Alleluia!

Clues had been offered that this is how it would turn out. Christ had said destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up. Now it had happened.

And of this question of authority? Who has it? Who is calling the shots? Overcoming death and the grave settled that once and for all.

Today
Jesus didn’t hold on to this authority, granted from on high, for himself. Instead, he gave it away to the disciples. It is an authority to cast out that which is unclean, an authority to heal the sick. It is an authority, as disciples of Christ, we claim today.

And what that looks like, in the flesh? We need go no farther than the greatest commandment: to love the lord your God, and to love your neighbor as yourself.

It is a call to care for our neighbors who are:

Women,
Children,
LGBTQ+

Immigrant,
Refugee,
Asylum seeker.

Hungry,
Unhoused,
Poor.

It is a call to care for our neighbors –
who are sick.
who are marginalized.
treated as less than.

And on whose authority do we do all these things?

It is none other than the Lord our God.

If you ever hear the –

Religious elites,
Business types,
Government officials,

try and do anything less than care for our neighbors, no matter who those neighbors may be, take note.

They were in cahoots with each other 2,000 years ago; many are in cahoots still.

They’ll sometimes share this alternate message from the –
Pulpits,
Podiums,
Profit centers –

of our day.

When their messaging says hey, treat certain people as less than, the authority they claim is not aligned with the Divine.

John Cougar Mellencamp, it turns out, was right:

I fight authority, authority always wins.
Well, I fight authority, authority always wins.

May we put away our struggle to control what is not ours.
May we recommit ourselves to care for our neighbor, without exception.
May we live into the authority to go, and to do.

It is an authority we have been granted by our savior, Jesus Christ.

For no other earthly “authority” will do. Amen.