Gospel of Mark

Subversive Seeds – Mark 4:26-34

Mark 4:26-34

He also said, "The kingdom of God is as if someone would scatter seed on the ground, and would sleep and rise night and day, and the seed would sprout and grow, he does not know how. The earth produces of itself, first the stalk, then the head, then the full grain in the head. But when the grain is ripe, at once he goes in with his sickle, because the harvest has come."

He also said, "With what can we compare the kingdom of God, or what parable will we use for it? It is like a mustard seed, which, when sown upon the ground, is the smallest of all the seeds on earth; yet when it is sown it grows up and becomes the greatest of all shrubs, and puts forth large branches, so that the birds of the air can make nests in its shade."

With many such parables he spoke the word to them, as they were able to hear it; he did not speak to them except in parables, but he explained everything in private to his disciples.


Not too long before I moved away from Paducah, Kentucky I performed in our community theatre’s production of the musical Godspell. In Godspell, Jesus and his friends take turns singing and acting out random parables taken from the Gospel of Matthew. The production concludes with a portrayal of Jesus’ death on the cross.

After each curtain call, our ensemble gathered at the foot of the stage to speak with the audience as they departed. I was surprised to see that so many people were moved to tears by the production. My fear was that the theater-goers with wads of wet tissues in hand were crying because my singing and dancing was so bad! However, they always said they were crying because of the powerful crucifixion scene.

What I wondered was whether anyone ever put it all together; that is, whether they realized that the sequence of parables, although seemingly-random, should have been just as powerful as the crucifixion scene because the parables were elements of Jesus’ life and teaching that set him on the path of death on the cross.

I don’t think they picked up of this because our director wanted to emphasize the unjust and absurd anger demonstrated by Jesus’ enemies. The powerful image in her mind was that of a completely innocent, loving, and even comical Jesus being killed for no reason. No wonder it brought up such an abrupt and jarring sense of loss, mourning, and pain in the audience.

Consequently, the audience witnessed a collection of little parables followed by an abrupt and unjustified murder.

The problem, though, is that Jesus’ murder wasn’t unjustified.

Jesus’ murder was completely justified; if your understanding of justice is that the people who have the most wealth and power and privilege get to make and enforce all the rules.

Jesus’ murder was the culmination of years of ministry and teaching that subverted power in favor of weakness, material abundance in favor of spiritual abundance, exclusion in favor of inclusion, and law in favor of grace.

Take today’s parable about the mustard seed.

Imagine a friend or even some random person came up to you and said, “You know, our faith is like a mustard seed; even the smallest amount can grow into something amazing and fruitful.” Well, that’s a nice and heart-warming sentiment, right? That’s a parable you could share with someone who needs some encouragement. You could even share that with someone who is doubting their faith.

But look at this parable from the perspective of the oppressive rulers in Jesus’ time. Imagine that you have all the power in the world, and all the region under your thumb. You hear of a charismatic individual who is amassing huge crowds wherever he goes. And the message he’s bringing to the hoards of people is that people who have faith in God may feel small and insignificant, like a mustard seed; but that their God will nurture that seed and raise them into “the greatest of all shrubs…[with] large branches.” For people of power, that’s anything but good news; that is a whisper of rebellion and revolution.

One parable paints the picture of salvation for some, and doom for others…all depending on how much power each one tries to wield in the face of the real power of God’s kingdom.

And that’s not the only way this parable is subversive!

Let’s think about this mustard plant that Jesus mentions. I found an article that says mustard “was a lot less like a flowering shrub that we might plant around the edges of our property as an accent than it was an invasive weed, something you want to keep out of your garden and lawn at all costs because it runs amok easily, gets out of hand, and nearly takes over whatever ground it infests.”*

Jesus says the kingdom of God is a lot like an invasive weed. That’s good, I guess, because that means it’s something that grows and spreads naturally. Our faith cannot be confined to one area of our lives, or one hour a week. We can’t do much to encourage its growth (nor remove it completely). In fact, most weeds grow best the worse the soil is.

But there’s a dark side to having a weedy faith…because that means our faith cannot be confined to one area of our lives or one hour a week. This weedy, invasive faith will change us. Our faith will propel us into adventures and relationships we’d never expect (and probably never seek out), challenge our assumptions about right and wrong, impact people around us, and open our eyes to a new and greater reality.

And those aren’t the only ways this parable is subversive! Here’s one more…

Do you remember what was to benefit from the shade of the mustard plant? (Birds of the air).

But listen to this. Prior to this parable about the mustard seed, Jesus tells another parable about a sower sowing seeds. Some are sown on good soil and grow to abundance, others were sown among thorns, where they were choked out; others fell on rocky soil, where the sun withered them because they had shallow roots; others fell on the path, where birds came and snatched up the seeds.

These seed-snatching birds could very well be the same birds that find shelter in the shade of the mustard plant.

So, what if Jesus meant to say that the very people who you feel are the biggest threat to your faith are actually the people whom you faith should benefit the most? One of my seminary professors writes, “These birds might be the undesirables, the folks decent people avoid, the ones we prefer to keep on the other side of our street and, preferably, outside our homes. Yet across Mark’s Gospel it just these people who flock to the kingdom Jesus proclaims.”*

My hope is that you see how parables such as this seemingly-innocent one about a mustard seed subverts power in favor of weakness, material abundance in favor of spiritual abundance, exclusion in favor of inclusion, and law in favor of grace. These seemingly-innocent parables are what got Jesus killed. These seemingly-innocent parables are keys to recognizing God’s remarkable and disruptive kingdom that is the true source of power and life in our world.

The same parable can inspire you one day, and terrify you the next. That’s how you know God is speaking to you and that God has something to say.

Amen.

 

* David Lose, "Pentecost 3B: Preach the Truth Slant" (http://www.davidlose.net/2015/06/pentecost-3-b-preach-the-truth-slant/)

"Rock Out" – Mark 16:1-8

Mark 16:1-8

When the sabbath was over, Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James, and Salome bought spices, so that they might go and anoint him. And very early on the first day of the week, when the sun had risen, they went to the tomb. They had been saying to one another, “Who will roll away the stone for us from the entrance to the tomb?” When they looked up, they saw that the stone, which was very large, had already been rolled back. As they entered the tomb, they saw a young man, dressed in a white robe, sitting on the right side; and they were alarmed. But he said to them, “Do not be alarmed; you are looking for Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified. He has been raised; he is not here. Look, there is the place they laid him. But go, tell his disciples and Peter that he is going ahead of you to Galilee; there you will see him, just as he told you.” So they went out and fled from the tomb, for terror and amazement had seized them; and they said nothing to anyone, for they were afraid.


Every three years the church gathers on Easter Sunday to hear the resurrection story from the gospel of Mark. As you listened to this text today, did you notice anything that’s different from the story you’ve heard on other Easter celebrations? I’ll give you a hint…the difference has to do with Jesus…

...In today’s story, he’s nowhere to be found!

Today is a day dedicated to celebrating the Lord Jesus, risen from the dead…but he never even makes an appearance in the story!

It would be like going to your first Colts game only to find out Andrew Luck announced his retirement earlier that morning.

It would be like setting up a romantic evening to propose to your girlfriend, but she cancels to hang out with an old friend who unexpectedly returned to town.

It would be like going to the new Avengers movie and finding out they replaced the Incredible Hulk with Gumby.

marvel-avengers.jpg

So, we’re all set to celebrate Jesus risen from the dead but all we have is the empty tomb.

Seems to me that the main subject in Mark’s story isn’t Jesus, but rather, the heavy stone covering the tomb. That’s right, today I’m going to preach about a big rock.

Imagine with me now, to a day 2,000 years ago, as the three women are walking to Jesus’ tomb early that morning, carrying the spices that will be used to anoint his corpse. A few steps into their journey one of them says, “Wait, what are we doing? We’re not going to be able to move the stone to get in there to anoint Jesus’ body!”

They stop in the middle of the road. One of them suggests they turn around and go home. There’s a voice of agreement from another; but the third woman wants to charge ahead with their mission. It’s one against two; but the minority voice wins out. “No, we’re going to do this,” she says. “I don’t know how, but we’ll worry about that when we get there.”

Through their whole journey, the question of how they are going to get on the other side of this heavy stone is all they can think about. It’s contentious. No one is in agreement. There is no clear-cut foolproof solution. Without easy answers ahead of them, they start to distrust one another. One of the women who originally wanted to give up and go home mutters under her breath, “I told you this was a bad idea. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.”

As they begin to see the outline of the cave in the distance, the women decided their best option to to wait outside the tomb until someone comes by to roll away the stone from the entrance to the tomb.

They arrive. They look up. They notice that the stone, which was very large, had already been rolled back.

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“How are we going to get on the other side of this heavy stone?”

On the road, it seems like the most important question in the world.

But it ends up being a red herring, an imaginary problem, something that needlessly fed their fears.

The stone had already been rolled away.

What good news is there in a gospel story about resurrection that fails to locate or describe the risen body of Jesus? The good news is that the obstacles that we think are so important, so monumental, so immovable…have already been taken care of for us.

The heavy stones in our lives–the barriers separating us from the new life, hope, and love we so desperately want to experience–have already been moved aside. That’s what God does. God is in the rock-moving, obstacle-clearing, barrier-busting business.

So, what’s the heavy stone in your life? What is the important, monumental, and seemingly-immovable obstacle that is preventing you from experiencing new life, hope, and love?

It’s my fear that too many of us are frustrated and kicking pebbles down paths that we assume will end in nothing but a tomb: broken relationships, feelings of inadequacy, fear of failure, questions we are ashamed to ask, mistakes we are ashamed to admit, ideas we are ashamed to profess. We distrust our fellow travelers on the way. We mutter “I told you so” under our breath. We think about quitting and going home. We spend our time worrying about how we will ever move the heavy stone. But the thing about immovable obstacles is that they are immovable...for us.

Even if the women on the road would have run full speed toward the tomb, confident in their power, faith, and problem-solving, they never would have been able to move that stone away.

So it’s a good thing God already took care of it.

It’s the same story for any barrier that we think is important, monumental, and immovable – from perverted politics to debilitating depression, from keeping up with the Joneses to dead-end jobs. Our mission is not to move heavy stones in order to anoint the dead. Our mission is to live in a way that honors the fact that the stones are already rolled away; new life, hope, and love have been unleashed; and God is among the living.

So much of what is so terribly wrong in our world is a result of our bickering and blindness as we fret about the big challenges that we assume are around the bend. Which is why we need to remember the women who journeyed to the tomb. They stop in the middle of the road. One of them suggests they turn around and go home. There’s a voice of agreement from another; but the third woman wants to charge ahead with their mission. It’s one against two; but the minority voice wins out. “No, we’re going to do this,” she says. “I don’t know how, but we’ll worry about that when we get there.”

Indeed, let’s charge ahead with our mission to live with hope, to forgive our enemies, to serve all in need, to be light in the darkness, and to love one another as Christ loves us, because that is what God unleashed on the world the day God rolled away the heavy stone.

Amen.