Pastor Mark

Just Mercy and Following Jesus

Matthew 4:12-23

Now when Jesus heard that John had been arrested, he withdrew to Galilee. He left Nazareth and made his home in Capernaum by the sea, in the territory of Zebulun and Naphtali, so that what had been spoken through the prophet Isaiah might be fulfilled: “Land of Zebulun, land of Naphtali, on the road by the sea, across the Jordan, Galilee of the Gentiles— the people who sat in darkness have seen a great light, and for those who sat in the region and shadow of death light has dawned.” From that time Jesus began to proclaim, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.”

As he walked by the Sea of Galilee, he saw two brothers, Simon, who is called Peter, and Andrew his brother, casting a net into the sea—for they were fishermen. And he said to them, “Follow me, and I will make you fish for people.” Immediately they left their nets and followed him. As he went from there, he saw two other brothers, James son of Zebedee and his brother John, in the boat with their father Zebedee, mending their nets, and he called them. Immediately they left the boat and their father, and followed him.

Jesus went throughout Galilee, teaching in their synagogues and proclaiming the good news of the kingdom and curing every disease and every sickness among the people.


I saw the movie “Just Mercy” a couple of weeks ago. It’s about the life and work of Bryan Stevenson, an African-American Harvard lawyer who has made a life and a living through the work of his Equal Justice Initiative, which is a non-profit organization, based in Alabama, that defends prisoners who can’t otherwise afford it and prisoners who have been denied a fair trial, and most notably saves the wrongly-accused and convicted from dying on death row.

He does the hard, holy, patient, persistent, courageous, faithful work of doing justice and loving kindness and walking humbly. And through that work, he has helped free 125 innocent men from death row after being unfairly imprisoned for decades – decades – and nearly murdered by the state for crimes they didn’t commit.

There’s a book by the same name – Just Mercy – which is even better than the movie, of course. And a fantastic documentary on HBO, if you have it, about the impact and importance of his work. The youth at Cross of Grace who traveled to Houston for the ELCA’s National Youth Gathering in 2017 got to hear Bryan Stevenson speak there. He’s an amazing human being. Doing God’s work in the world, for sure. I’m kind of a fan. He makes me wish I would have gone to law school, sometimes.

Anyway, there’s this point in that movie about his life when Bryan Stevenson, fairly fresh out of Harvard law school, is ready to leave his life – up north in Delaware – for a new one – down south in Alabama, by way of Atlanta. And young Bryan, circa 1980-something, is talking with his mother, who is deeply worried about what her son may be getting himself into: a young black man, heading for the southern states in the US, to start a career fighting the legal establishment at every level for its crimes against the poor in general, and against people of color, in particular.

His mom is as proud as she is worried about her son, of course. And you get the impression that if she could have stopped him, she would have. And she says to him, “What you’re doing is going to make a lot of people upset.” And she says, “If you can’t see the danger in what you’re doing, you need to ask Harvard for your money back.” Stevenson explains that he just wants to help people and reminds his mother that she’s the one who always taught him to fight for the people who need it most.

Like I said, I think Bryan Stevenson is an amazing human being, doing God’s work in the world as clearly and courageously as anyone. And it’s why I thought about him again – and this moment with his mother, especially – when I read this morning’s Gospel where Jesus invites these young men to follow him; to leave their friends and their families and their lives as they knew them; and to fish for people – whatever that  means – doing God’s work in the world.

See, I thought about Bryan Stevenson’s mother when I wondered about Zebedee this time around, left behind in the boat that day. I feel sorry for the father of James and John, who gets left in the boat with the nets, with who knows what kind of work left to be done, or with what sort of business to run while his sons take off to “God-knows-where,” literally, to follow this Jesus around. And I wonder if he worried for his sons the way Bryan Stevenson’s mother worried about hers.

Because following Jesus – in first Century Galilee, or in 1980’s Alabama, or anywhere, today, a lot of the time – isn’t always easy or safe or sensible, if we’re doing it well.

Because it wasn’t always any of those things for those disciples we heard about this morning, either – James, John, Simon and Andrew, or the others who joined them. Sure, there were miracles and healings and feasts and some measure of fame around Galilee, I imagine, that went along with being part of Jesus’ inner circle. But it wasn’t all that, all of the time.

They were sent out as sheep among wolves with this “good news” Jesus wanted them to share, remember. Not everyone – and especially not those among the popular, the powerful, or the privileged – wanted to hear what they had to say about justice, or generosity, or fairness, or faith.

There were times when they would not be welcomed and would have to shake the dust from their sandals as a testimony against those who refused them. There were times when their own families would be divided because of what they were up to.

They were being invited to cozy up to lepers and to cast out demons and to make friends with tax collectors, prostitutes, prisoners, and sinners of every stripe. In other words, the fish Jesus meant to catch were not, necessarily, the catch of the day.

They were called to love their enemies, to bless those who persecuted them, to turn the other cheek, to put themselves last instead of first, to give up one coat if they were lucky enough to have two, to sell all of their possessions, really…

Oh, and to take up a cross … to lose their life for the sake of this Gospel … on behalf of this “fisherman” who was really a carpenter … for the sake of these “fish” who were really just people – broken, hurting, lost, sick, sinful, untouchable people the rest of the world wanted nothing to do with. Again, none of this was easy, or safe, or sensible on the surface.

And when they couldn’t do it, they just had to watch Jesus take their heat; to take up the cross they refused to bear; to watch him suffer, be crucified, die and then be buried for their sins and for the sake of the world.

I wonder if it all sounded like a different kind of adventure in the beginning. I wonder how many times James and John longed to be back in the boat with their dad, just fishing for fish, again. I wonder how many of those early followers didn’t stick around or follow for long. I wonder how many said “no,” and never followed along in the first place. And I wonder what I would have done – if I would have dropped anything, let alone everything, that day on the beach – and how long I would have stuck it out, if I had.

But, those early disciples – and people like Bryan Stevenson – give me hope and inspiration and the holy challenge to keep trying; to keep following Jesus and living this life of faith as best as I can, I mean.

There’s another moment in that movie about his life, when Bryan Stevenson is trying to convince one of his clients – on death row for a crime that wasn’t his – about why he does the work and that he’s not just another unqualified, incapable, uncommitted attorney – like the ones who had failed this guy in the past. Stevenson says he won’t quit or give up or leave him, like the other attorneys had, because he knows “what it’s like to be in the shadows.”

Which brings me back to this morning’s Gospel again, because this morning’s Gospel reminds us of why Jesus did it all in the first place, too. And why we can – and perhaps should – just the same: Because people are sitting in darkness, still. There are so many people – too many people – living their lives in the valleys and in the shadows of death. And we have too… or we do, now… or we will, someday… know what it’s like to be in the shadows, just the same.

It may not be prison – or death row, even – for a crime we did or did not commit, thanks be to God. But we might know the shadow of sickness or a sadness that seems insurmountable. We might know the darkness of addiction or divorce or a fear we can’t shake. We may one day sit in the various and sundry shadows of loneliness, despair, depression, anxiety, joblessness, victimhood, failure, abuse, guilt, shame, and so on down a longer list than we have time for this morning.

Whatever the case, there is someone in your life – someone in your midst – someone in this room, perhaps – someone in the mirror – who could use a little light… a little grace… a little forgiveness… a little mercy… a little bit of hope for a change.

And that’s why we follow Jesus. Because he’s already been there and done that – been to and through the darkness and the shadows, I mean, and lived to tell about it. And because of that good news, we are invited to have courage to do the hard, holy, patient, courageous work of faith; to follow Jesus – doing justice, loving kindness, walking humbly; bringing the light, sharing grace, extending mercy, offering love and hope and second chances in his name.

Amen

Earthquakes, Coming Out, Death, and New Life

Matthew 3:13-17

Then Jesus came from Galilee to John at the Jordan, to be baptized by him. John would have prevented him, saying, “I need to be baptized by you and do you come to me?” But Jesus answered him, “Let it be so now; for it is proper for us in this way to fulfill all righteousness.” Then he consented.

And when Jesus had been baptized, just as he came up from the water, suddenly the heavens opened to him and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and alighting on him.  And a voice from heaven said, “This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased.”


So, Jesus shows up to be baptized by his friend, John, who is in the business of baptizing people, in droves it seems, down by the river. He’s blessing them with this ritual cleansing, calling them to repentance, to change, to a new understanding and way of life in the faith. And when Jesus shows up – who John recognizes as someone more powerful and more important than the average Jew or Gentile convert – John says, “wait a minute, I need something from you first. I need to be baptized by you and do you come to me?”

And Jesus says, “Let it be so now.” “Just do this.” “It’s gotta be this way.” “Trust me on this one, and get on with it.” So John consents. He gives in. He plays along. There’s a baptism, and a bird, and a voice from heaven confirming what must have been rumored in a million ways, for anyone else who had known, like John, all that the prophets had declared, all that Mary and Joseph had been told, and all that the events of his birth so many years before had fulfilled: this Jesus, from Nazareth, really was the Son of God. 

And everything changes for Jesus after that moment in the river. By the power of his baptism – after the water and the dove and the voice that declared him the “beloved” of God – his ministry is let loose in the world. Without missing a beat – at least according to Matthew’s Gospel – Jesus heads for the wilderness, survives his 40 days of temptation by the Devil there, returns to call his disciples, and gets on with all the preaching and teaching and healing that let people know this Son of God gig was no joke, that this Kingdom of God really was alive in the world, and that everything was about to change. And again, it all started with baptism.

So I wanted to think about baptism that way together, this morning. We all have a time or two or maybe more, in our lives, when everything changes. Sometimes it’s a good thing, for the better. Sometimes it’s not, and things go south. Sometimes it’s to be expected that things would/could/should change. Other times we’re not so sure. Sometimes the changes happen instantly, dramatically, obviously. Other times the changes sneak up on us slowly, quietly, unsuspectingly – like on cat’s feet, as a friend of mine likes to say.

My friend Jamalyn, who many of you know… have heard preach here… maybe even travelled with to Haiti… shared a post on Facebook this week, in memory of the earthquake that destroyed so much of Haiti, back in 2010 – exactly 10 years ago, today, as a matter of fact. Jamalyn happened to be in Fondwa when the earthquake struck and it changed her life. Because of the shock and trauma and sadness and destruction the earthquake heaped upon this place and these people Jamalyn loves – and because of the way the Haitian people in Fondwa loved her through that terrifying experience – she counts it all as a point of demarcation in her life. (That’s the word she used.)

For Jamalyn, there was life before the earthquake and there is now life after the earthquake. It changed so much for her and for her family. It’s why, ultimately, she left ministry as a pastor in the United Methodist Church, to begin ministry with Zanmi Fondwa, to build homes for those people and that community in Haiti.

Baptism can be like an earthquake. It can shake the foundations of our lives in this world, by giving us a glimpse of the next. It means to shift the ground beneath us in a way that makes us see, differently, the suffering of the world around us… to adjust our footing… to get our bearings… and to respond accordingly. Baptism invites us to count our blessings and move us to action as servants of God for the sake of the world.

My high school friend, Jeff, talks about coming out of the closet as a gay man, sometime after high school, as a thing that changed everything for him. Until then he lived life constantly pretending, always looking over his shoulder, always wondering who might suspect or know his secret. He uses the word “trauma” to describe what it’s like to live with that kind of ever-present stress, anxiety, and fear as kid. He talks about coming out as a thing that eased all of that over time. No more secrets. No more pretending. No more lies. No more shouldering the burden of bearing false witness against his very self. When he found the courage to finally tell the truth about himself – his identity – his very nature as a child of God – he was free to love and to be loved in ways that were genuine and true, fulfilling, life-giving and life-changing for him.

Baptism can be like a cosmic coming out. In baptism we are called by name, given a new identity in the name of the Father, +Son and Holy Spirit, and declared “beloved” by the creator of the universe. Baptism invites us to live and move and breathe differently in the world, unburdened by guilt or sin or shame, whether we have done anything to deserve those burdens or not. Baptism is an invitation to live differently because of the truth and fullness of God’s love for us – even if we or the world can’t muster the same kind of grace. Baptism is the love of God giving us permission to live freely… openly… forgiven… beloved… and to live loving others in as many ways as God has already loved us.

Some of you have heard me talk about another high school friend of mine, Dave, who died in a drunk driving accident the summer after we graduated from college. The car was full of other high school friends of ours, too, and the accident changed everything for Dave, obviously. But it changed everything for our friend Jason, the driver, for the others in the car, for Dave’s family, and for many of our friends, too.

And it didn’t happen instantly, by any stretch, but it changed a lot – I’ve come to see it as a point of demarcation – in my own life, too. It was my first big nudge toward seminary… and ordination… and ministry in the Church. At Dave’s funeral, I wanted to hear more and better and different from the priest who presided. In the days that followed, I was forced to consider and to practice mercy and forgiveness and grace where my friends were concerned, especially Jason, the driver. And I wrestled with faith and the hope of the Gospel in a way I had never done before, really. And so here I am.

Baptism is a matter of life and death – in this world and for the next. Baptism is Good News for all of creation, and that includes each of us. It is a reminder that God’s grace has already been poured out, like so much water, through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. And Baptism is an invitation for us to live bravely with one foot in all the ugly, broken, sinful, scary, sadness of life in this world, and with another foot firmly planted – with hope – in the notion that God’s love, when shared with and among and for one another, is bigger and better than all of that – and that kind of love makes enduring all the rest possible and worth it, in the end.

I think baptism for Jesus was an earth-shattering, life-changing, point of demarcation that made him see the world around him differently. I believe baptism for Jesus was a coming out, of sorts, that gave him a sense of identity and an understanding of his beloved-ness in God’s eyes; that moved him to share that love so generously with others. And I believe baptism for Jesus was a coming together of life and death… of the brokenness of this world and the beauty of the next… that brought heaven to earth and that gives us a glimpse of God’s kingdom right where we live.

I think baptism – whether we have been or will be one day – is an invitation and call for each of us to be so utterly changed by God’s love for us that we can’t help but share that love and hope and mercy with the world around us, until everyone hears and knows and believes that they, too, are freed… forgiven… beloved by God, and changed by grace in the name of the Father, +Son, and Holy Spirit.

Amen