Sunday, November 06, 2016

God holds us in thin places: All Saints Sunday


The first reading was Job 19:23-27a.
 
The holy gospel according to Luke

27Some Sadducees,
       those who say there is no resurrection,
              came to Jesus 28and asked him a question,
                     “Teacher, Moses wrote for us that if a man’s brother dies,
                            leaving a wife but no children,
                                   the man shall marry the widow
                                          and raise up children for his brother.
                     29Now there were seven brothers;
                            the first married, and died childless;
                            30then the second
                            31and the third married her,
                            and so in the same way all seven died childless.
                            32Finally the woman also died.
                                   33In the resurrection, therefore,
                                          whose wife will the woman be?
                                                 For the seven had married her.”

34Jesus said to them,
       “Those who belong to this age marry and are given in marriage;
              35but those who are considered worthy
                     of a place in that age and in the resurrection from the dead
                     neither marry nor are given in marriage.
                            36Indeed they cannot die anymore,
                                   because they are like angels and are children of God,
                                          being children of the resurrection.
                     37And the fact that the dead are raised Moses himself showed,
                            in the story about the bush,
                                   where he speaks of the Sovereign
                                          as the God of Abraham, Sarah, and Hagar,
                                          the God of Rebecca and Isaac,
                                          and the God of Jacob, Leah, and Rachel.
                            38Now God is God not of the dead,
                                   but of the living;
                                          for to God all of them are alive.”

The gospel of the Lord.

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It is profoundly ironic that in our readings for today it is precisely those who do not believe in the resurrection who prompt our deeper thinking and experience of the resurrection. Job, as was typical of his time, doesn’t actually believe in the resurrection or everlasting life the way we might today. 

For Job, when you died, you died and the way you lived on was through your descendants and the name, or reputation, you made for yourself.  And yet, today we find new meaning in Job’s words, “I know that my Redeemer lives, and that at the last will stand upon the earth; 26and after my skin has been thus destroyed, then in my flesh I shall see God, 27awhom I shall see on my side, and my eyes shall behold, and not another.”

Much of our understandings and lives are built on others’—on the lives and understandings of those who’ve come before us.  In this way, we hear Job’s words and we are able to find new and different meaning, even as the old understandings may remain, fade, or change.  We hear in Job’s word a promise of everlasting life—a promise of new life in the resurrection.

Jesus’ encounter with the Sadducees also turns things around. You see, the Sadducees try to trap Jesus with complicated questions about the Resurrection—which they don’t even believe in!

So it comes as no surprise that Jesus uses their question as more of a jumping off point than as a question in need of a clear answer. With their resurrection question in his metaphorical pocket, Jesus dives into the nature of God. 

After all, the resurrection only matters insofar as our God is beyond death.

Jesus alludes to Moses’ encounter with God at the burning bush, where the name Godgives Moses is “I AM or I will be.”  God is an active God.  God is a present God.  God is God even into the future.  Jesus says, “God is God not of the dead, but of the living; for to God all of them are alive.”

God’s presence with us is a forever thing and there is nothing we can do to screw it up so badly that that will not be true—for us or for anyone else.  God is God of the living and yet even when we die, God is still with us.

Too often in our culture, we avoid death like the plague and then when people die we give a set amount of time for grief and then expect people to be back to their old selves again.  But that is not how grief works and that is not how love works.  When people we love die, the work of grief is figuring out our new relationship with them—one built less from physical presence and more from heart, feelings, and memories.  Loved ones who have died still remain a part of our lives, just in a different way.

In fact, there are times throughout the year and places where peoples across cultures recognize the delicate difference between the living and the dead. In Celtic tradition, they referred to it as “thin places,”—in thin places and thin times, the boundary between those of us who are alive and those who are dead is thinner and we are more able to sense their presence.

In Mexico, the Day of the Dead—el Día de muertos—is a time spent with those who have died—making altars at home or decorating graves.  Last night we celebrated together—remembering friends, family, and community members who have died, and we built the altar that is in the back, decorating it and adding our own pictures, mementos, food and drink from loved ones.

This time of year, when the earth grows cold, when the harvest finishes, is the time when we are all closer to death.  It used to be that some wouldn’t make it through the winter and so these celebrations of life were what carried people through to the next one.

It is also fitting that today is a communion Sunday because communion is one of those places where “we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses.  Communion is many things—it is a communal meal in which we participate in God’s alternative economy where all are fed—all receive our daily needs.  Communion is a renewing of God’s covenant of love with us. 

And Communion is also our participation in and our glimpse of the feast to come.  In this, we don’t just practice, but we taste the feast, we participate with the great cloud of witnesses.  When we receive the bread and wine that is Jesus, we are in line with our parents, spouses, friends, and even children who have completed their baptismal journey. We join with our ancestors in the faith throughout the ages to celebrate the power of life that comes from God.

Today especially as a community of faith, we gather to celebrate and remember those we love who have died.  As we do, we also feel their presence and the ways they continue to impact our lives.

For some of us their presence will always be tangible and for others it will fade and morph with time.  For some of us, our grief at the death of a loved one or even a stranger will overwhelm us, for others it will settle in as numbness or come back at unexpected times.

Each of us grieve and process death differently and on All Saints’ Day and special anniversaries, we experience again the presence of those who have died.  Those thin places invite them into our lives again in a different way. We eat their favorite foods, reminisce about memories and over pictures.  We go to bed, wrapped in their arms, only to find that it is our God who is holding us close, remembering with us, and bringing us again to each new day, each new feast, each new life.

Thanks be to God.

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