John Prine

The Primeval Mythology of Genesis - Creation

John 19:38-42

After these things, Joseph of Arimathea, a follower of Jesus, though a secret one because of his fear of the Jews, came to Pilate and asked if he could take away the body of Jesus. Pilate gave him permission; so he came to remove his body. Nicodemus, who at first had come to Jesus by night also came, bringing with him a mixture of myrrh and aloes weighing about one hundred pounds. They took the body, wrapping it in the spices and linens, according to the Jewish burial customs. Now, there was a garden in the place where Jesus had been crucified and in the garden there was a new tomb in which no one had ever been [buried.] So, because it was the Jewish Day of Preparation, and because the tomb was nearby, they laid the body of Jesus there.


“The Primeval Mythology of Genesis: Creation”

I’ve already heard some curiosity – maybe mixed with some cynical suspicion – about the title of this new sermon series: “The Primeval Mythology of Genesis.” Curiosity and suspicion aren’t terrible things and I think it’s the word “mythology” that stirs the pot for some people, which was kind of our goal. Part of the point with this next round of sermons is to remind ourselves and each other that we’re called to read the Bible LITERATELY, not LITERALLY, and to see that its message and good news – its grace, hope, and promise – go deeper and wider when we do.

So first, things, first … which is what “primeval” means, sort of … first things; of the earliest ages; the beginning of the beginning, you might say. The first eleven chapters of the Bible’s first book are where we will spend our time the next few weeks. The good stuff before the good stuff. The stage-setting. The foundation. The genesis, is where we begin.

And the word “mythology” rightly ruffles feathers if we are inclined to equate the foundational narrative of our faith story with the fables, fairy tales, and fictional “myths” of, say, the Greek gods (Zeus, Poseidon, Aphrodite, and the like); or Aesop’s fables; or the tall tales of the wonderful world of Walt Disney. But that’s not what we’re up to.

“Myth” and “mythology” can mean something more, something deeper from a theological perspective, which is what we plan to wrestle with. I would contend that, when we limit stories like creation, where we are beginning this morning, to all and only what we can glean from it LITERALLY, that that’s precisely how and when we reduce it to something like a mere fable, a fairy tale, a fictional “myth,” rather than when we wonder about the holy, sacred, profound Truths that this story – and the others like it in Scripture – hold for our life and faith in this world.

And where better to start than at the very beginning – “it’s a very good place to start” – in the beginning, with the fact that, if we’re honest, the two very different versions of creation that we just heard – from Chapters 1 and 2 of the same book – make it really hard to take either of them LITERALLY?

I mean, those are two very different versions of the same story, right? (Many Bibles, like the ones we read from each Sunday, say it plainly. Chapter 2 is “another story of creation.”) The story in Chapter 1 tells of the day-by-day, very long work-week of the Almighty, who creates first this, and then that, with a break and no small measure of satisfaction between each.

“…and God saw that it was good…” “…and God saw that it was good…” “…and God saw that it was good…”

“…and there was evening and there was morning, the first day…” “…and there was evening and there was morning, the third day…” “…and there was evening and there was morning, the fifth day…”

But Chapter 2 goes down altogether differently. In that version of creation, God – like some sort of holy potter, or divine craftsman, or sacred sculptor – makes a man from the dust, then plants a garden and puts him to work, then decides he could use a companion and some help, so then creates all the rest, and a woman, to boot.

In version #2, we don’t know which came first or next, on which day. And none of that matters.

What matters is that God, something Divine, did something divine – created the heavens, the earth, and all that is in them. What matters is that it was and is good. What matters is that we are part of that goodness – you and I – and all people – created good, by God; and created for good, for God’s sake.

What matters, if you ask me, is that we stop reducing the Bible to some sort of prehistoric science book – the authors of which never could have known a thing about bunker-busting missiles or atomic bombs; about Gaza or the West Bank, as we know of them today; about electric cars, school shootings, cancer, chemo-therapy, Medicaid or social media. And that’s okay. These stories have something to say to all of that – and to all of us – nonetheless.

Because what the creation stories tells us – among so many other things – is that we are made in the image of the divine, even though we do so much to make that hard to believe. And we are made in the image of the divine, not just because we have heads, shoulders, knees, or toes…

…but we are made in the image of the Divine because we are made for community, like God; with the power to create and care about and have compassion, like God; that we have the capacity to do justice, like God; make sacrifices, like God; be generous, like God; forgive, like God; and love one another, like God.

Oh, and this is important: the stories of creation make it very clear that none of us IS God and that we shouldn’t try to be – which Pastor Cogan will get to next week, I believe.

Instead, for now, let’s let the stories of creation inspire within us what, I believe they were meant to inspire and to teach and to proclaim all along: a sense of reverence and awe about what God can do; a posture of humility and gratitude for our part in the grand scheme of things; and a response from each of us – and all of us together – that is generous, careful, and full of service that acknowledges our connection to all people and to the grand scheme of things.

Because today’s good news includes the notion that we are created “just a little lower than the angels” – as the Psalmist puts it – and that God calls us to live differently because of that Truth. God invites us to tend to and care for what belongs to God – the earth and all that is in it. God calls us to replenish what we use up – from the earth and from each other, too; to give more than we take, save, and keep for ourselves.

So, what if these primeval creation stories are nothing more – and certainly nothing less – than prehistoric best efforts at describing something that cannot be described; that is too big for words; that are meant to love us and leave us in awe and wonder for what God has done for us – and hopes to do through us – for the sake of the world where we live?

What if these primeval creation stories are nothing more – and certainly nothing less – than poetic prose from a prehistoric Mary Oliver, who could marvel at creation as well as anyone, as far as I’m concerned? Her poem Wild Geese, goes like this:

You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
love what it loves.
Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.
Meanwhile the world goes on.
Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain
are moving across the landscapes,
over the prairies and the deep trees,
the mountains and the rivers.
Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,
are heading home again.
Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,
the world offers itself to your imagination,
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting –
over and over announcing your place
in the family of things.

What if the point of the creation stories is simply, and profoundly, to announce your place – and mine – in the family of things?

And what if these primeval creation stories are nothing more – and certainly nothing less – than like clever song lyrics from a pre-historic John Prine, encouraging you, with a wink and smile to…

“Blow up your TV, throw away your paper
Go to the country, build you a home
Plant a little garden, eat a lot of peaches
Try and find Jesus on your own.”

What if these primeval creation stories are nothing more – and certainly nothing less – than prehistoric pieces of art – trying to capture, with words, something like Van Gogh’s “Starry Night”:

or Monet’s “Water Lilies”:

or even Ansel Adams who, like the story tellers of Genesis, certainly had a thing for trees.

But, speaking of John Prine, I hope the Gospel reading wasn’t too on the nose this morning. But I wanted to connect all of this to Jesus, of course. Because it is as poetic and powerful to me that our faith story begins and ends, in a garden, sometimes.

There aren’t enough of even the most beautiful words, songs, poems, or prose to adequately convey the power of God’s love in creation – or by way of the Word made flesh, in Jesus. And I think the two different versions of creation that we find in Genesis aren’t in competition. They’re just evidence and acknowledgment of that fact – of how grand and glorious and full of grace this God is that we worship.

So I think it’s a beautiful thing that both versions of creation’s origin story – and the consummation of God’s resurrection in Jesus … God’s defeat of death … Christ’s victory over Sin for our sake … I think it’s beautiful that all of that, too, takes place in a garden – where light shines in the darkness; where the goodness of God bears fruit for the sake of the world; where sin never gets the last word; where we are all made and made new in God’s image; and where hope rules, in spite of the chaos, because of the grace, mercy, and love of the God we know in Jesus.

Amen

On Earth As It Is In Heaven

Matthew 13:31-33, 44-52

[Jesus] put before them another parable: “The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed that someone took and sowed in his field; it is the smallest of all the seeds, but when it has grown it is the greatest of shrubs and becomes a tree, so that the birds of the air come and make nests in its branches.”

He told them another parable: “The kingdom of heaven is like yeast that a woman took and mixed in with three measures of flour until all of it was leavened.”

“The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field, which someone found and hid; then in his joy he goes and sells all that he has and buys that field.”

“Again, the kingdom of heaven is like a merchant in search of fine pearls; on finding one pearl of great value, he went and sold all that he had and bought it.”

“Again, the kingdom of heaven is like a net that was thrown into the sea and caught fish of every kind; when it was full, they drew it ashore, sat down, and put the good into baskets but threw out the bad. So it will be at the end of the age. The angels will come out and separate the evil from the righteous and throw them into the furnace of fire, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.”

“Have you understood all this?” They answered, “Yes.” And he said to them, “Therefore every scribe who has been trained for the kingdom of heaven is like the master of a household who brings out of his treasure what is new and what is old.”


I was grateful for today’s Gospel in a different kind of way this week. With everything going on in the world, my last few sermons have been pretty heavy, it seemed. And this one could be, too, of course. The parables can be as challenging and as heavy and as hard as anything, but I don’t have it in me to go there again today. I’m not sure what was going on in the news the day Jesus rattled off these parables about the Kingdom of Heaven – it seems impossible they were having a year like we’ve had so far in 2020, but who knows? Whatever the case, I found myself just wanting to muse about Jesus’ penchant for painting a picture of the Kingdom of Heaven – those mustard seeds, that yeast and flour, the treasure in a field, the merchant, the fine pearl and the fishing net, too.

I – and countless other preachers and theologians – have dissected and theologized and philosophized and pontificated about the deep meaning behind each of these parables. Volumes have been written about the meaning of the mustard seed. Tomes have been written about the treasure in the field. Pages and pages and paragraph after paragraph have been penned about fine pearls, and all the rest.

So usually, when this Gospel collection of Jesus’ parables shows up, I pick one and run with it, adding my two cents to what so many, smarter more faithful preachers than me, have already said about any one of these images of the Kingdom.

So, this time around, I decided to wonder about all of them together. And I thought it seems possible that maybe Jesus is more like brainstorming with himself or spit-balling at a board meeting more than he is preaching to or teaching the disciples anything he’s absolutely certain about with these parables. (This whole section of parables in Matthew’s Gospel begins with Jesus taking a seat by the sea, then getting into a boat when the crowds surround him. He may not have been out there prepared to preach and teach at all that day when he said these things.)

So I’m just wondering, what if this litany of parables is more like Jesus musing outloud and trying to find the words himself to describe the Kingdom of Heaven to his friends and followers in some way that makes sense. After all, all of those parables, full of their metaphors and analogies and illustrations and teaching moments don’t, frankly – in their details – have a whole lot in common. But, taken together, I realized, their message and meaning seem to say two pretty simple, but profound, holy, and inspiring Truths.

First … the kingdom of heaven is all around us, all of the time, in simple, surprising, everyday things. (In seeds and fields, in treasure and pearls, in flour and fishing nets, and all the rest.)

And second … you know it when you see it.

So, first things first … the kingdom of heaven is all around us, all of the time. And I’m not talking about “samples” of the kingdom. Not “images” of the kingdom. Not “illustrations” or “metaphors” or “analogies” or mere “approximations” of the kingdom. But I believe the Good News of Jesus was and is that the Kingdom of Heaven IS. The Kingdom of Heaven is alive and well and around us, now, right where we sit or stand, and out there in the world, too.

And, again, we know it when we see it. We feel it when it finds us. We are moved by the Kingdom when we sense that we’re moving within the Kingdom.

So, I wonder … have you seen it? Have you experienced it lately? Have you witnessed your life and faith coming together in ways that might have felt a little bit like heaven on earth? If you were by the sea in Galilee, spit-balling with Jesus about what the Kingdom of Heaven might be like, what would you suggest to keep the conversation going?

I have some ideas, but I’d love to hear yours. (This is the “crowd participation” portion of the sermon that most Lutherans would only do by way of Zoom, so I thought I’d take advantage of it. Because you can share your ideas with me or with everybody using the “Chat” feature at the bottom of your screen. You don’t actually have to talk in church! If you want to be even more shy and anonymous, even, send me a private Chat message and I won’t tell who said what.)

No pressure, though. I’m going share some from my own spit-balling and brainstorming and invite you to sit with them for a moment or so. Some are specific and particular. Some are more universal and common ground we all might share in one way or another. Whatever the case, I hope we can reflect on and relish the Kingdom among us, this morning, so that we might recognize it more often in the magnificent and the mundane of our daily lives going forward.

I think the Kingdom of Heaven is like holy communion in your living room or kitchen, these days.

I think the Kingdom of Heaven is like an acoustic guitar and a cleverly turned lyric, something like John Prine or the Indigo Girls, if I had my pick.

Speaking of a cleverly turned lyric. I read this poem, this week, written by a four-year old with a book deal. (I’m not sure if the Kingdom of Heaven is like a four year-old with a book deal, but this poem is pretty great.)

Coming Home Nadim Shamma-Sourgen (4 years old)

Take our gloves off. Take our shoes off.
Put them where they’re supposed to go.
You take off your brave feeling
Because there’s nothing
to be scared of in the house:
no dark caves, no monsters,
no witches, no bees, no howling sounds
You don’t need your brave anymore.
Wash your hands. Eat lunch. Go get cozy.

I think the Kingdom of Heaven is not needing your “brave” anymore.

I think the Kingdom of Heaven is the smell of puppy breath.

I think the Kingdom of Heaven is like making love and meaning it.

I think the Kingdom of Heaven is being able to offer forgiveness, fully; and to receive it, fully, just the same.

I think the Kingdom of Heaven is the perfect gift – given or received.

I think the Kingdom of Heaven is like baseball’s opening day and the Buckeye Marching Band taking the field on a perfect Fall Saturday afternoon.

I think the Kingdom of Heaven is a well-earned vacation.

The Kingdom of Heaven is justice done … mercy extended … gracious compassion.

I think the Kingdom of Heaven will happen later this morning when the body of Representative John Lewis is marched across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, one last time, as part of his life’s celebration.

I think the Kingdom of Heaven is when the healing comes … and I think it’s also the ability to muster hope when it doesn’t.

I think the Kingdom of Heaven is saying goodbye and walking out the door for the last time, knowing you’ve said all there is to say.

I think the Kingdom of Heaven is the ability to preach a sermon without words.

The Kingdom of Heaven is like laughter that brings tears and belly aches and more laughter, still.

I think the Kingdom of Heaven is that sound or scent or song or season that pleasantly surprises you with the memory of a moment or a person or a place you haven’t thought about in a while. 

Today – and in these days, especially, perhaps, – we are called to see and to be the Kingdom of Heaven for one another and for the sake of the world. And today, Jesus reminds us that we are surrounded by the Kingdom at every turn. God is relentless about showing us the Kingdom in our midst. And I think Jesus means to open our hearts and our minds and our eyes so that we will see it more often and rest assured and be at peace and find joy in its fullness – on earth as it is in heaven.

Amen

P. S. Thankfully, Zoom recorded the “crowd participation” portion of the sermon, since I couldn’t see or say all of the Chat replies in real time. Below is the complete list of responses, from those in both worship services, about the ways and places they’ve seen or experienced the Kingdom of Heaven lately. Thanks for playing along.

Baptisms

The kingdom is in laughter.

The kingdom is in the smile of a child.

Neighbors coming together during the pandemic – in distant ways, outside.

The rising chorus demanding justice for all people.

I see it when I am walking on the open space trail with the Rocky Mountains to the west.

When a grandchild looks at you with adoring eyes and says "I love you Grandma."

In the beauty and abundance of nature around us on our patio this morning.

Knowing that God brought my husband home from the hospital to still be with me.

Watching families being together in the outdoors as I ride my bicycle.

In the blooming of flowers.

From the playfulness of the four paws in our lives.

Neighbors who watch over and are there for me!

The beauty of nature God has given us.

We had a beautiful granddaughter born this week!!!

Neighbors sharing meals.

Watching a brilliant sunset last weekend.

The joy of kids cannonball jumping into a swimming pool.

Love of dogs and cats and their ways to make a bad day better.

We saw seagulls turning pink in the sunset over Lake Erie.

 A momma duck and her babies gliding on the pond.

Every time we work with the food pantry.

Lindsey's Thursday night yoga on the labyrinth.

Wonderful conversations with friends and family.

Double rainbow.

Being on a boat on a lake!

Abby caught the ball yesterday getting the batter out and Ginny reinvigorated the team for a win.

Walking on the beach.

Watching the sunset over the ocean.

Feeling safe on a huge roller coaster.