compassion

"Compassion is Divine" – Luke 7:11-17

Luke 7:11-17
Soon afterwards he went to a town called Nain, and his disciples and a large crowd went with him. As he approached the gate of the town, a man who had died was being carried out. He was his mother's only son, and she was a widow; and with her was a large crowd from the town. When the Lord saw her, he had compassion for her and said to her, "Do not weep." Then he came forward and touched the bier, and the bearers stood still. And he said, "Young man, I say to you, rise!" The dead man sat up and began to speak, and Jesus gave him to his mother. Fear seized all of them; and they glorified God, saying, "A great prophet has risen among us!" and "God has looked favorably on his people!" This word about him spread throughout Judea and all the surrounding country.


Once I have read a passage of scripture, I ask a question in order to open myself to the scripture’s significance for my life. The question I ask is, “Why is this story in the Bible in the first place?” Why, of all the accounts of Jesus that were witnessed and passed along through generations, why was this one preserved?

Early this week I asked that question as I engaged with today’s gospel text. And I had to sit in silence for quite some time. The silence then turned to anger.

Why is this story in the Bible? I didn’t know. In fact, I didn’t like this story one bit.

After all, what good is it to tell a story about Jesus raising a widow’s son from the dead when such miraculous raising from the dead does not happen today?

What good is it to tell a story about Jesus raising a widow’s son from the dead when sons and daughters today die fighting in wars, die by gunshot in the streets or schools, die in police custody…when sons and daughters die by suicide, die by cancer, die by car accidents, die by preventable disease, and die because they lack adequate access to food, shelter, and clean water.

Sons and daughters today die in any number of unfair, unjust, and unthinkable ways. What good is it to tell a story about Jesus raising a widow’s son from the dead when Jesus doesn’t raise our dead sons and daughters? Why is this story in the Bible, when it seems like God either does not or cannot act to prevent evil, suffering, and death in our world?

The question about why God would permit evil and death in the world God created has been a topic of endless reflection and debate for millennia, so don’t think I’m going to tie it up nicely with a bow in the next few minutes. In fact, I’ll go ahead and throw one more thing out there to consider. I’ll show you a clip by a British actor/humorist Stephen Fry from last year that has been viewed well over one million times and it is framed as an “epic takedown” of religion. The title of the YouTube video is actually “Stephen Fry Annihilates God.” See for yourself…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2-d4otHE-YI (I stopped the clip at the 2:10 mark)

There are any number of ways to respond to Stephen's speech. This week, sitting in silence and anger, I choose to respond with empathy. There are so many people in the world just like Stephen Fry – people who choose to discount the notion of “God” because there is evil and suffering in our world, be it purposeless, unexplainable phenomena, or calculated evil actions. I cannot blame him or anyone else for thinking this way. 

But the more I think about his argument, I find it underwhelming and unhelpful. And I’m thinking that this opinion might have to do with that story in the Bible – the one about Jesus raising the widow’s son from the dead.

In that story Jesus, with a growing crowd following on his heels, witnesses a mother grieving for her dead son. Luke tells the story with the words, “ When the Lord saw her, he had compassion for her and said to her, "Do not weep.” 

This sentence marks the first time Jesus is referred to as “Lord” in the Gospel of Luke. Up to this point Jesus had accomplished a multitude of amazing feats and yet remained “Jesus.” But seven whole chapters into the gospel, and Jesus finally did something that warranted the title of “Lord.”  “When the Lord saw her, he had compassion for her.”

Amazing feats and profound wisdom are all well and good; but compassion is divine. 

David Lose, the President of the Lutheran Seminary in Philadelphia writes,
“[I]t’s not just the title ‘Lord’ that helps describe Jesus, but that his act of compassion describes and even defines what it means to be Lord. To be Lord, that is, is to be vulnerable to the suffering of another. To be Lord is to feel compassion. To be Lord is to not just feel compassion but to act on it, to do something. To be Lord is, finally, to heal, restore, renew, and in all ways to help.”*

That story paints the picture of a God who is intimately involved in our world, not as a puppet master or manipulator or sadist, but as an engaged, healing, holy, and powerful presence that leads people still today to the realization voiced by the awestruck crowd gathered about the once-dead, now-breathing, widow’s son, "God has looked favorably on his people!" 

That changes things, folks. Recall your experience of suffering and imagine what it would mean to know that God saw you and had compassion for you in your suffering.

Imagine that God is not distant but near. Imagine God doesn’t delight in your pain, but weeps with you. Imagine that God is not callous, but completely vulnerable.

That truth wouldn't negate the anger we justifiably feel when our sons and daughters die. It doesn’t change our frustration with God’s apparent inaction in the face of suffering. But surely it would teach us how to respond to others in this world where death is all around us. Surely it would teach us to have compassion on others.

“Have compassion on others” is a bland and uninspired message better served to sell a product rather than be a divine and transformative word. I would be a poor preacher, indeed, if my message was for you to be nice to people. That’s the message Stephen Fry stands for. 

Instead, as a Christian, I am called to preach the divine and transformative word that “God has compassion.” God, as evidenced by Jesus Christ, looks upon our suffering and responds with empathy, compassion, and, we pray, action.

I could rant and rave and plead and implore you to go out into the world in the name of Jesus to look for and show compassion toward people who are suffering and have compassion; but unless you have experienced compassion from God, you would not be able to do so.

Instead, I’ll leave you with the words of my spiritual muse, Henri Nouwen, who himself traveled a long road of suffering as well as compassion. He writes,

"When we honestly ask ourselves which person in our lives mean the most to us, we often find that it is those who, instead of giving advice, solutions, or cures, have chosen rather to share our pain and touch our wounds with a warm and tender hand. The friend who can be silent with us in a moment of despair or confusion, who can stay with us in an hour of grief and bereavement, who can tolerate not knowing, not curing, not healing and face with us the reality of our powerlessness, that is a friend who cares."**

Amen.

David Lose “Dear Working Preacher” June 5, 2013
** 
Henri J.M. Nouwen, Out of Solitude: Three Meditations on the Christian Life

G2A #9: "What Are You Going To Do About It?" – Luke 4-5; John 5

Earlier this week I attended a “Hunger Awareness” luncheon benefiting The Sharing Place - a material assistance agency in Lawrence Township.

The irony of having a luncheon to raise funds and awareness of hunger issues is not lost on me. While I served on the board of directors of a relief agency in Western Kentucky we tossed around the idea of having a fundraiser in which we promised to provide food with their donation but then not serve food, in order to really raise awareness of hunger issues. However, as fundraising ideas go, we all knew this was a really bad one!

The featured speaker at this week’s luncheon was a representative of an international corporation based in the Indianapolis area. This for-profit organization has a goal of addressing the issue of food security–the concept that our planet is not currently capable of producing the amount of food that will be necessary to feed the Earth’s population, particularly as we look towards the projected population of 9 billion by the year 2050.

The speaker gave a fairly polished speech in which he highlighted the problem, cited research, had engaging visual aides, and inspiring quotes. He assured us that the solutions to the problems of hunger and food security will come from inspired individuals and corporate innovation.

However, beyond the ideas of inspiration and innovation, the presentation lacked any concrete ideas of ways to solve the problems of hunger and food security. This bothered me.

The lack of concrete ideas or practical steps bothered me because it fed into my insecurity as a preacher. As a preacher I often wonder if I’m failing to provide practical steps we can address the problems of the world. As a preacher I am called to proclaim the good news of inspiration; I like to think of myself as innovative. Indeed, inspiration and innovation are essential; but they are worthless without action.

Perhaps the luncheon presentation would not have bothered me so much if not for the fact that it came on the heels of the news that comedian and actor Robin Williams committed suicide, that an unarmed African American young man was killed by a police officer in St. Louis, that Middle-East religious extremists funded by extortion and oil profits are systematically and brutally murdering anyone who stands in their way–especially Christians, and so on.

Yes, inspiration and innovation are necessary tools to address the pervasive problems of debilitating depression, fear of the other, terrorism, and the unequal distribution of wealth and the Earth resources. But all the inspiration and innovation in the world aren’t going to make a bit of difference unless real people take real steps to affect real change.

It’s not our calling to feel sorry for people who live with depression so debilitation that they contemplate, attempt, and even succeed in ending their own lives. Rather, we are called to actually reach out to individuals who are suffering. We are called to nurture an environment in this church where honesty about our struggles and personal demons creates a place of healing without fear of isolation and shame. We are called to sit with someone in the darkness and gently remind them of the healing presence of Christ, without judgment, condemnation, or shame.

It’s not our calling to lament or cast blame for the amount of violence in our world today. Rather, we are called to identify the parts in our own lives and institutions where violence festers and grows. We are called to combat our fear of those who are different than us. We are called to see the other as a beloved child of God.

It’s not our calling to despise and hope for the annihilation of those who use an extremist and warped understanding of their religion as justification for murdering people of other faiths, cultures, and nationalities. We are called to pray for these enemies. We are called to see the ways in which we use our own faith as justification for hating, undermining, and exploiting people of other faiths, cultures, and nationalities.

It’s not our calling to rely on the inspiration and innovation of for-profit corporations to ensure that there is enough food on this planet so that everyone can have enough to eat. As people of faith we are called to grow and serve food to the hungry. We are called to stop hoarding food while others are starving. We care called to live simply so that others can simply live.

Inspiration and innovation are essential to solve the problems facing our world; but they are worthless without action.

God did not take on human flesh as Jesus Christ to provide us with warm, fuzzy feelings; nor simply to provide inspiration and innovation. Rather, God's flesh and blood existence established practical steps that people could take to make the world a safer, more equitable, and more affirming place for all people.

Jesus did not calm the storm in order to gain attention and show off. Jesus calmed the storm in order to prove that peace and confidence is possible in the midst of fear.

Jesus’ compassion towards the stranger, sick, immoral, and outcast was not a marketing or public relations strategy. Jesus’ unconditional compassion is a life-changing truth that extends to the parts of our own lives that are strange, sick, immoral, and outcast.

We, as believers in the way, the truth, and the life, have been given incredible freedom through our forgiveness; we have been equipped by the creating and redeeming Lord to move beyond our sense of worthlessness and inadequacy to work towards creating a safer, more equitable, and more affirming world for all people.

I’m reminded of a parable by Søren Kirkegaard. He describes a town where only ducks live. Every Sunday the ducks waddle out of their houses and waddle down Main Street to their church. They waddle into the sanctuary and squat in the proper pews. The duck choir waddles in and takes its place, then the duck minister comes forward and opens the duck Bible. He reads to them:
“Ducks! God has given you wings! With wings you can fly! With wings you can mount up and soar like eagles! No walls can confine you! No fences can hold you! You have wings. God has given you wings and you can fly like birds!”
All the ducks shouted, “Amen!” And they all waddled home.

Jesus was not a cheerleader, a motivational speaker, or a hawk of corporate innovation. And Jesus was certainly not a waddler.

Jesus was a revolutionary, an activist, a do-er, a difference-maker.

This is a call to action.
– pick up the phone and call someone who you suspect might be dealing with depression, and offer words of kindness and hope;
– turn off the partisan, inflammatory 24-hour TV newscasts and radio programs that stir up irrational hatred and fear;
– pray for those who seek your harm;
– think someone who you may have injured or offended and seek forgiveness (even if you think you were in the right);
– learn about how your food choices impact the world and strive to reduce your impact on the earth’s resources so that others can have enough;

I would like you to think about one concrete, real-life, practical action you will take that God could use to positively impact the world. I’d love for you to share it with me, but even if I don’t know what your one concrete, real-life, practical action will be, I will certainly be praying that you will find the strength, courage, and confidence to see that idea transform into a powerful and graceful action.

Amen.