Gospel of Luke

Ex-Cons and Christ the King - Luke 23:33-43

Luke 23:34-44

When they came to the place that is called “The Skull,” they crucified Jesus there with the criminals; one on his right and one at his left.  And Jesus cried out, “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.” And they cast lots to divide his clothing. Many people stood by watching, but the leaders scoffed at him saying, “He saved others, let him save himself if he is the Messiah of God, his chosen one.” The soldiers also mocked him, bringing him sour wine to drink, saying, “If you are the King of the Jews, save yourself.” And there was an inscription over him, “This is the King of the Jews.”

One of the criminals who was hanged there, kept deriding him saying, “Are you not the Messiah? Save yourself, and us.” But the other rebuked him, saying, “Do you not fear God, since we are under the same sentence of condemnation? And indeed, we have been condemned justly for our deeds. But this man has done nothing wrong.” And he said, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.” And he replied, “Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in paradise.”


Christ the King Sunday’s message seems more prescribed and predictable to me than I prefer when I sit down to write a sermon. This day, as a festival celebration on our church calendar, didn’t exist until 1925, when Pope Pius XI decided that the Church was called to combat the political goings-on in the world at the time. And Churches of all flavors played along as a way to remind believers, in the aftermath of the first World War that, in spite of that – and in spite of worldly sorts of Kings – we should lift up Jesus as the one and only and ruler of our lives in the world.

So it’s full of big picture stuff, this notion of Christ the King. It’s 1st Commandment stuff: “I am the Lord, your God. You shall have no other Gods before me.” It’s Jesus in the desert, being tempted by the devil, sort of stuff: “You shall worship the Lord your God and serve only him.” It’s eschatological, end of days, Book of Revelation sort of stuff: trumpets and white robes and throngs dancing around the throne of “Jesus Christ the faithful witness, the firstborn of the dead, and ruler of the kings of the earth,” as John writes in Revelation.

And that’s all well and good and I hope we get that. Today I’m going to assume we get the big picture of all of that. I’m taking for granted that, because we’ve prayed about it and fretted over it and stumbled through our recent presidential election that even the political implications of this day are clear to us – and the same as they were back in the day – that Jesus, not a king or a Kaiser, a president or a politician or a political party – are to have utmost power and influence over our lives in this world. And that none of that will matter in the next life, either.

Well, a friend of mine wrote a blog the other night that brought the message of Christ the King down to earth for me, if you will. He wrote about how he was walking home from work last week, in Philadelphia, past the federal prison there, and let an ex-con borrow his phone. I mean a just-released, fresh-from-the-cage, carrying-his-belongings-in-a-plastic-bag kind of ex-con. It was a short, simple, sweet and holy little reflection. Here’s some of what my friend wrote:

…a guy stopped me to ask if I could call his mom for him. He had no phone on him, and he needed her to pick him up.

“I was just released from federal prison,” he said — as in, just moments before, he had walked through the front doors of the fortress across the street.

It seemed a detail I might have withheld if I were in his shoes. You know … prison. Makes people nervous.

So of course I said yes. He just got out, and he needs a break, and I’m going to thumb my nose at him? He gave me her number, I entered it, and it began to ring. It seemed inappropriate for me to do the talking, so I handed him the phone, which seemed to surprise him…

…He spoke to his mother in Spanish, so I don’t know what he said, but the conversation was short. No more than 10 or 15 seconds…

…Briefly I was nervous, hovering over him as he spoke to his mother from a stranger’s phone... But the nervousness faded.

I’ve never been asked for a favor from someone fresh out of prison. The street was well lit, there were many people around, and it occurred to me rather quickly that outside of a federal prison was probably among the least likely places someone would try to steal my phone or rob me. And statistically, he seemed as likely as any other stranger to do me harm — which is to say, not very. I could assume nothing about him. I had no more reason to have any prejudice against him for leaving the federal prison than I would if he had just left the Federal Reserve Bank.

So, yeah. Of course he told me he was just released from prison. Why wouldn’t he? He was proud of it. He was done. He was back. It signified that he wasn’t about to try any funny business. And what did I have to worry about? He was probably the most trustworthy person on that block at that moment, including myself.

He handed me the phone back and said thank you.

“You’re welcome,” I said. “Have a great night.”

…As he walked away, he looked relieved — elated, really — to be breathing the evening air, I suppose. To be talking to a stranger. To be calling his mom without a time limit and a queue behind him. To be free.

And I guess I was happy to be part of a friendly, helpful encounter. Welcome back, buddy. Good luck out there.

So what if “Christ the King Sunday” doesn’t have to span the depth and breadth of our political, theological landscape? What if we don’t try to wrap our brains around the theological implications of it, so much as we wrap our hearts around the depth and breadth of its implications for our daily lives in the world as we know it?

See, my friend reminds me that each of us has the power to let the love of God rule our lives, daily, in small but meaningful ways. It can be as high and mighty as Jesus promising eternity to that lost soul on the cross. It can be as worldly and practical as my friend sharing a moment of grace and mercy – in the form of a phone call home – with an ex-con who needed a hand and some hope on his first day of freedom.

So I wonder how many of us – I wonder if I – would have let that guy borrow my phone. Because I think we forget too easily that we are more like that ex-con than not, in the eyes of Christ the King. As broken, sinful people, we are more like those criminals hanging next to Jesus – one on his right, and one on his left – and we are, each of us, looking for relief, needing forgiveness, wondering about eternity, and hoping and praying and trying hard to put our ultimate trust in something bigger and better than ourselves.

And this is the God we get in Jesus. Christ the King is a God of grace, mercy, and peace. Love, forgiveness, and humility. Sacrifice, generosity, and a wide, welcoming kind of hospitality and kindness to all of God’s children.

If we live with that Jesus as our King and ultimate authority, the love of Christ will rule in our hearts, and in our minds, and in our lives – as the benediction goes. And we will know paradise – like every sinner before and since – and we’ll know it “today…” now… in this life and for the next.

 

Amen

Election Reflection – Luke 21:5-19

Luke 21:5-19

When some were speaking about the temple, how it was adorned with beautiful stones and gifts dedicated to God, he said, “As for these things that you see, the days will come when not one stone will be left upon another; all will be thrown down.”

They asked him, “Teacher, when will this be, and what will be the sign that this is about to take place?” And he said, “Beware that you are not led astray; for many will come in my name and say, ‘I am he!’ and, ‘The time is near!’ Do not go after them.

“When you hear of wars and insurrections, do not be terrified; for these things must take place first, but the end will not follow immediately.” Then he said to them, “Nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom; there will be great earthquakes, and in various places famines and plagues; and there will be dreadful portents and great signs from heaven.

“But before all this occurs, they will arrest you and persecute you; they will hand you over to synagogues and prisons, and you will be brought before kings and governors because of my name. This will give you an opportunity to testify. So make up your minds not to prepare your defense in advance; for I will give you words and a wisdom that none of your opponents will be able to withstand or contradict. You will be betrayed even by parents and brothers, by relatives and friends; and they will put some of you to death. You will be hated by all because of my name. But not a hair of your head will perish. By your endurance you will gain your souls.


I felt like the lectionary laughed at me this week when I opened my Bible to see that the text for the day of our Building Fund campaign’s Commitment Sunday was this bit from Luke’s Gospel where Jesus warns the disciples about making too much of their temple. With all kinds of ideas about prayer vigils, campaign packets, building projects, mortgage payments, and financial commitments swimming around in my head, Jesus says, “As for these things that you see – these beautiful stones and gifts dedicated to God - the day is coming when not one stone will be left upon another. All will be thrown down.”

Really, Jesus? Thanks for the help and the encouragement. Here we are trying to celebrate what we’ve built, how we’ve grown, and how we can invest more into it all, and Jesus shows up to remind us that – in the grand scheme of things – every bit of this is just waiting to become rocks and rubble.

So, maybe our investment is for naught. Maybe we shouldn’t bother. Maybe we’ve made more of this than we should.

But then I spent some time with a group of pastor friends of mine this week, for a continuing education sort of event, and we were asked by our presenter to share with one another what our particular communities would miss if our particular congregations didn’t exist within them. (And it made me think about this Gospel. What if it all really was “thrown down”… just gone … as Jesus suggests?)

Anyway, we said all sorts of things like, how much the community at-large uses our facilities…like how we host the only active Alcoholics Anonymous meeting in or around New Palestine, how we charter a Boy Scout pack which uses our space a few times a month, how we’re part of the safety/emergency reunification plan for Southern Hancock Schools, or how we may or may not have the best election site in our county, and that sort of thing.

And as I thought about Jesus and this Gospel, I thought, “Yeah. All of those very tangible, brick-and-mortar, building and space offerings, really would just go away if our facility, our building, our stones were to ever get ‘thrown down,’ as Jesus promises they will someday. That would stink – for us and for our community.”

But in addition to sharing all of those sorts of really practical, worldly things with my pals, the pastors, I thought of something else we would miss – and something that would be missed in our community – if Cross of Grace wasn’t here. And I’m praying, really praying hard these days, that this is still true the way I’ve experienced it in the past.

What would be missing in our community – and in our lives – if Cross of Grace wasn’t around … is a family of faith that is grounded in the grace of God to such a degree that we have found a way to live together and to do the work of God’s kingdom alongside one another, in spite of the many differences that exist among us.

And yes, the presidential election has shined a spotlight on that reality, in a big way, this week.

I got a phone call Thursday afternoon from one of you who had just had a conversation with a co-worker about why so many people – particularly minority groups of people – people of color, LGBTQ people, women, and such – were struggling with the result of this election. And one of our people was able to have a civil, faithful conversation with a co-worker of differing views that opened her colleague’s eyes to such a degree that he was speechless – literally had to leave the room and collect himself, what he’d heard was so new to him. He considered things he hadn’t before. He was surprised by things he hadn’t been surprised about before.

And our Partner in Mission called to let me know that that conversation made her realize what a gift it is to have been a part of our life together over the years, because we’ve engaged the kind of predicament our country now faces in a very real way before.

In 2009, when the ELCA made the choice to open itself more widely to the acceptance and inclusion of LGBTQ children of God, we walked a road together of hard conversations and holy learning and difficult decisions about the things we agree about, the things we disagree about, and about how much more meaningful the work of the kingdom we’re called to do together is, in spite of all that.

Those are conversations and that is a reality that just doesn’t happen in a lot of places – let alone Christian churches – in our day and age. And it can send some people running for the hills, or at least out of the room in a state of shock.

And because of our short history together, according to the Cross of Gracer I was talking to, it was going to be much more possible for her to show up to worship on Sunday morning and sit next to and sing alongside and pray with and get in line for communion behind any number of others who may very well have voted differently than she did on Tuesday.

And that means that what would be missing from our community and from our lives if Cross of Grace wasn’t around, is the very real presence and practice of God’s kingdom among us.

Don’t get me wrong. We have a lot to learn and there is so much work to do. And bearing the kingdom is as hard as it is holy. Just look at what Jesus promises his disciples in the rest of today’s Gospel – betrayal, arrest, hatred, even death.

But, what life in this congregation calls us to do in these days is to not live in our own, respective little bubbles – or “echo chambers” which seems to be the term du jour, these days – where we only hear what we want to hear; where we only see the news as it’s reported by our network of choice; where we only consider the one-sided views and ideas of the “friends” who fill our social media feeds; where we never have to challenge or be challenged by the differences that surround us in the real world.

No. By virtue of the gift and challenge of this community, we are called to live and to love our neighbor – even and perhaps, especially, those neighbors we would rather not.

Because we can’t change hearts and minds – and our hearts and minds can’t be changed – by the love of God unless or until we do the work of living with one another, even when it’s hard; forgiving one another when it seems impossible; loving our enemies, turning the other cheek, doing justice, loving kindness, and walking humbly… humbly… humbly with our God.

So let’s be patient with each other in the days ahead. Let’s not rush or dismiss or try to fix the grief and sadness, fear and betrayal some of us are feeling. Let’s not assume the worst about the motives of those who got our way this time around. And let’s do what God’s been calling believers to do ever since the day Jesus was milling around in the temple with his disciples:

Let’s use all of this as our opportunity to testify to what we know of God’s call and kingdom among us: to work for justice, to stand for peace, to repent and forgive, and to use every blessing at our disposal to bless the world around us with the same grace that covers us all.

That’s the kingdom of God alive and well in this place. And it’s what will matter - and it is what will last - long after all of this and all of us are turned to dust.

Amen