Statistics

"Climbing Mountains with One Leg" – Luke 3:1-6

Luke 3:1-6

In the fifteenth year of the reign of Emperor Tiberius, when Pontius Pilate was governor of Judea, and Herod was ruler of Galilee, and his brother Philip ruler of the region of Ituraea and Trachonitis, and Lysanias ruler of Abilene, during the high priesthood of Annas and Caiaphas, the word of God came to John son of Zechariah in the wilderness. He went into all the region around the Jordan, proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins, as it is written in the book of the words of the prophet Isaiah,

“The voice of one crying out in the wilderness:
‘Prepare the way of the Lord,
    make his paths straight.
Every valley shall be filled,
    and every mountain and hill shall be made low,
and the crooked shall be made straight,
    and the rough ways made smooth;
and all flesh shall see the salvation of God.’”


I suspect some of you have seen something like this before, but I thought it would be fun – and maybe a little more impactful – to “see” it in a different way, played out with some familiar faces that we know.

Someone took the time to take facts about the world’s population and ration them proportionately down to a hypothetical population of 100 people. With those facts and figures, it was suggested that a room full of 100 people, representative of the world’s population, might look like this:

We’d be pretty equally split by gender – 50 would be men and 50 would be women.

Of the 100, 26 would be kids, aged 0 - 14; 66 would be 15 - 64 years old; only 8 would be 65 years old, or older.

When it comes to where we would live: 60 would be from Asia; 15 would be from Africa; 11 would be from Europe; 9 would be from Latin America and the Caribbean; and only 5 would be from North America.

And, since we’re in church, the religious statistics are worth wondering about. There would be 33 Christians; 22 Muslims; 14 Hindus; 7 Buddhists; 12 people who believe in "other religions;" and 12 people who wouldn't claim connection to any faith, in particular.

In terms of the languages we’d speak – our native tongues, anyway:

12 would speak Chinese
5 would speak Spanish
5 would speak English
3 would speak Arabic
3 would speak Hindi
3 would speak Bengali
3 would speak Portuguese
2 would speak Russian
2 would speak Japanese
62 would speak "other languages" that don’t even make the list, or our radar, probably.

But this is where it gets good and relevant to our Gospel for today and for what God means to be up to in Jesus:

In a village of 100 people, 83 would be able to read and write, 17 would not. Only 7 would have a college degree.

78 of us would have electricity, 22 of us would not.

65 would have “improved sanitation;" 16 would have no toilets; 19 would have "unimproved toilets."

87 of us would have access to clean drinking water. 13 of us would not.

15 of us would be undernourished.

48 of us (half!) would be expected to live on less than $2.00 US, per day

1 of 2 children would live in poverty

I was part of an exercise once where Alan Storey, a Methodist Pastor from South Africa, had a room full of pastors illustrate some of what this looks like in an even more dramatic way. Without bothering with all of the statistics, he had a handful of people in a crowded conference center gathering room come forward and asked them to stand on one foot while he talked. He made a couple of men from the group act as gate-keepers and their job was to bust anyone who put their other foot down, or who used a hand or a chair or another person to catch their balance. If you got caught or couldn’t keep up, you were banished to the back of the room, which served as “the outer darkness.”

Meanwhile, the rest of the group was invited to make themselves comfortable with all the extra space and chairs they now had, thanks to the unlucky, one-legged losers who had to stand up front. The rest of the group could stay seated and stretch out, put their feet up on the extra chairs they now had access to. They could get up and help themselves to food and drinks … donuts and coffee … the bathroom … whatever. 

It was fun and funny. There was laughter and then some awkwardness, once people started to figure out what was going on. There were some who played along as best they could and others who opted out, not bothering to be part of it from the get go.

But the point was made – and it’s the same, whether you’re looking at numbers, counting statistics, standing on one leg, or sitting comfortably with your coffee and a donut:

It’s embarrassing and convicting and shameful to admit that there are so many people – more people than not, really – too many people – standing on one leg in this world. And it’s embarrassing and convicting and shameful to admit that you and I are happy as clams – most of us – seated comfortably in our abundance of chairs, drinking clean water, leaving the lights on, flushing our toilets, eating our fill, and pretending that that’s okay; that it’s not our problem; that God has blessed us in some way that justifies – or at least allows for – our abundance in the presence of others’ scarcity and struggle.

But today, we get this unsettling, unsettled, loud-mouthed, John the Baptist, crying out in the wilderness and calling B.S. on our way of living and moving and being in the world. And it’s no accident the way Luke’s Gospel introduces John the Baptist. He is introduced after a long line-up of very impressive leaders by the world’s standards: the Emperor Tiberias, the Governor Pontius Pilate, King Herod and his brother Philip, rulers like Lysanius and High Priests like Annas and Caiaphas.

And then there’s John. Just John. The son of Zechariah. And he’s not from Abilene or Galilee or Judea or anywhere worth naming, either. He’s just out there, somewhere, crying in the wilderness, like a street-preaching, carnival barking, nut-job.

All of which points to the notion that John is out there, standing on one leg. Not one of the powerful. Not one of the popular. Not one of the 1%, either. At least that’s not who he’s preaching on behalf of and that’s not who he’s preparing the way for, in Jesus Christ, the coming messiah of God.

With all of his talk about the valleys being filled, the mountains being leveled, and the rough ways being made smooth, John is pointing to God’s plan for the kingdom and he’s inviting whoever will hear him to prepare the way for Jesus. And one way to prepare the way for Jesus, you might say, is to consider what in the world Jesus himself would say to those of us who are comfortable in our places and in our palaces; and what in the world Jesus would do for those of God’s children who are suffering and struggling and still standing on one leg, after all this time.

I think Jesus would remind us, in these Advent days, that the means by which we have come to be so comfortable in our chairs…the abundance we take for granted…the excess that we exploit…is not ours to do with as we please. I think he would remind us how arbitrary it is that some rest easy while others never seem to get a break; how fine a line there really is between having the upper hand and going through life with one arm tied behind your back; between standing, safely on two feet and standing on one leg.

I think Jesus would teach us to take and use only what we need and to share the rest. I think Jesus would show us that there are mountains of discrimination and bigotry people can’t climb above on their own; there are valleys of poverty people can’t get out of by themselves; there are rough ways of racism that trip people up; there are crooked ways of injustice in the world that trick and trap God’s children. The world is not a level playing field like the Kingdom of God is intended to be. And it’s not going to fix itself.

So, I think Jesus showed up as a baby in a manger, hoping with a deep and wide, cosmic kind of everlasting hope, that we would see in his eyes the eyes of anyone and everyone who is standing one leg – or crying out in the wilderness – or dying on a cross – and longing desperately to experience resurrection and new life in this world as much as in the next.

And I think Jesus showed up to keep on forgiving the sins of the seated – you and me – and loving us until we finally, fully receive it…until we are grateful enough and faithful enough to get out of our chairs… until we are courageous and bold enough to hand over our seats – or at least to make room and level the playing field – for someone who’s dying to rest, like we do, in the blessing of God’s amazing, everlasting, earth-shaking, life-changing, grace.

Amen

"The Stats and the State the Church" – John 17:6-19

John 17:6-19

[Jesus prayed,] "I have made your name known to those whom you gave me from the world. They were yours, and you gave them to me, and they have kept your word. Now they know that everything you have given me is from you; for the words that you gave to me I have given to them, and they have received them and know in truth that I came from you; and they have believed that you sent me. I am asking on their behalf; I am not asking on behalf of the world, but on behalf of those whom you gave me, because they are yours. All mine are yours, and yours are mine; and I have been glorified in them. And now I am no longer in the world, but they are in the world, and I am coming to you.

"Holy Father, protect them in your name that you have given me, so that they may be one, as we are one. While I was with them, I protected them in your name that you have given me. I guarded them, and not one of them was lost except the one destined to be lost, so that the scripture might be fulfilled. But now I am coming to you, and I speak these things in the world so that they may have my joy made complete in themselves. I have given them your word, and the world has hated them because they do not belong to the world, just as I do not belong to the world. I am not asking you to take them out of the world, but I ask you to protect them from the evil one. They do not belong to the world, just as I do not belong to the world. Sanctify them in the truth; your word is truth. As you have sent me into the world, so I have sent them into the world. And for their sakes I sanctify myself, so that they also may be sanctified in truth."


I wonder if any of you saw the recent article about the state of Christianity and the Church in the United States that’s been making its way around the internet this week? I shared it on Twitter and Facebook yesterday, hoping maybe it might prime the pump of your preparation for worship today.

First of all, the title of the thing is, “Millenials Leaving Church in Droves, Study Says” and the article goes on to site statistic after statistic about the sad, struggling, dire, dying state of the Church in our self-proclaimed “Christian” nation. Statistics like:

+ The percentage of people who identify themselves as Christian has dropped 8% since just 2007.

+ More than 1/3 of Milliennials, those born between 1990 – 1996, according to the study, are unaffiliated with any faith, up 10% since 2007.

+ Which means there are more adults unaffiliated with a faith community (about 23% of the population) than there are Catholics and also more than there are who call themselves Protestants, like you and me.

+ And also, while 85% of people born between 1928 – 1945 call/called themselves Christians, only 56% of that millennial demographic does the same.

(You can read the whole CNN article HERE.)

And this is all hard to read, for several reasons. First of all, it’s not all that new. If you live like many of you and I live from one day to the next – connected to The Church, such as it is – and if you’ve been paying attention you can see, without the surveys and statistics – that things have changed in terms of the power and presence of a connection to the Church in the lives of young people. (I don’t have a survey to back it up, but 99% of my closest friends throughout high school and college were never connected to a faith community – Christian, Jewish, Muslim or otherwise.)

Another reason news like this is hard to hear is that – just by virtue of good journalism and pure scientific research – these reports are necessarily offered up by objective, third party sources. In other words, I always feel like someone outside of the fold is pointing fingers and casting judgment – even if they are just reporting the news. You know how you can say all you want about your mom or your dad or your siblings – or your crazy Aunt Sally – but as soon as someone else adds their two cents of criticism or judgment, you’ll defend the honor of your loved ones to the point of death? I think that’s our inclination sometimes when we get the impression that outsiders are criticizing the Church.

And another reason this news about the decline of the Church was hard to hear, again this week – especially as it relates to young people – is because I knew we were set to affirm the baptisms of four of our young people today as part of worship. And I genuinely wonder and worry if they know full-well what they’re committing to today. (…any more than I did way back in 1980-something, when I made my own confirmation, before effectively checking out of my connection to the Church in any real, meaningful way for too many years.) If you believe the statistics, the odds of Mitchell or Annelise or Dane or Macey honoring the commitment they’ll make today – to continue their lives as part of the Church – aren’t great, or even likely. And that’s discouraging.

But then I read, again and again, Jesus’ prayer from John’s Gospel, and it reminded me of what this Christian walk is really supposed to be about for believers. I think the movement of God’s love and grace and mercy in the world, has always been most inspiring and most compelling when it is revealed in small, humble, intimate, ways. Whether it was a baby in a manger, the healing of a leper, the forgiveness of a woman, the turning over of the tables in the temple, or that crucifixion at Calvary, the movement of God’s love and grace and mercy has always been a movement by and for the outsider and the minority. It has always been unpopular and out of the ordinary and counter-cultural and against the grain and downright rebellious in the face of the world around it. And when it’s not those things, I wonder if maybe we aren’t suppose to question its motives and mission in hard and holy ways.

So…I read another great article this week, one written in response to the statistics, that pointed out that while some Christians pine for the heyday of the church – like the window of time from the 1940’s to the 1960’s, for instance, when anywhere from 91% to a whopping 93% of Americans identified themselves as Christian – they might just be fooling themselves or delusional about what that really meant for the state of things in the Church or our country or out there in the world, for that matter.

After all, those were the same days, remember, when, among other things, black people couldn’t vote or sit in the front of the bus; gay and lesbian people couldn’t be gay or lesbian people, let alone feel like faithful Christians, in any official, open, faithful way in the eyes of the Church; and of course, women couldn’t lead in most realms of the professional world, let alone serve as Pastors in the Church.

(You can read this article, from SOJO.net HERE.)

So, I guess the news is grim for the Church, if you look at the statistics from just one perspective – and if the success of Christianity is measured like an adolescent popularity contest. But believing in and following Jesus isn’t supposed to be about the numbers. It’s supposed to be about Good News in the face of bad; new life in the face of death; second chances; resurrection; radical grace; faithful risk; abundant mercy; amazing love. It’s supposed to be about the last being first; faith the size of a mustard seed moving mountains; losing your life in order to save it.

And not everyone is attracted to that. Not everyone’s up to the challenge of that. Not everyone sees the power in that. So this Good News, which God means to be for everyone, isn’t always going to be shared or received by the masses.

That’s why Jesus was praying like he prayed today, for his disciples. Jesus was “… not asking on behalf of the world, but on behalf of” the small number who’d followed him – which had dwindled to eleven or so at the time. He asked for their protection and that they might be bound together – unified as one – for their life and work, presumably because their lives and their work would be hard, and because they were going to need all the help they could get. Jesus knew that not being “of the world,” that being over and against the world, even – all of this loving the enemy and welcoming the stranger; forgiving without limits and caring for the least; of being and standing up for the underdog, was hard, holy work and not for the faint of heart.

The cool thing about the Christian life as I see it, isn’t that we have the most members in our congregations; or the most butts in the seats on Sunday morning; or the most popular stance on this or that issue. The cool, compelling, fun and faithful, challenging thing about the Christian life is that we are called to be rebels for the sake of God’s grace in the world – sharing it radically in ways that are hard for some people to swallow or to play along with, even.

So Jesus’ prayer for that first handful of disciples we just heard, is something like my prayer for our handful of confirmands – and for all of us doing our best to walk this walk of faith in a world that thinks we might just be a little bit crazy, or out of touch, or out of date, or outnumbered, or whatever.

The prayer is that we be united and emboldened in our effort to receive and to share God’s love without reservation; that that love be poured out in ways and for others that will surprise them – whether they’re part of what we’re up to or not – and that we’ll rest assured, not in success as the world measures it. But but that we’ll rest assured in God’s kind of victory that loves sinners and welcomes outcasts, with radical grace; God’s kind of victory that lifts up the lowly and comforts the untouchable with amazing love; God’s kind of victory that is more generous than seems rational or wise, sometimes; and God’s kind of victory that creates something out of nothing, that shines light in the darkness, that finds what is lost, and that rises from the dead.

Amen