The Adventurous Lectionary – The Eighth Sunday After Pentecost – July 10, 2016

The Adventurous Lectionary – The Eighth Sunday After Pentecost – July 10, 2016 July 1, 2016

The Adventurous Lectionary – The Eighth Sunday After Pentecost – July 10, 2016

Amos 7:7-17
Psalm 82
Colossians 1:1-14
Luke 10:25-37

In today’s readings, it appears that God has a preferential option for the vulnerable and marginalized, for those we disregard or pass by. God loves everyone, even the oppressor, but God has a special care for the lost and forgotten, for those who are ground into dust by the machinations of business and government. For God, it is never “just business.” Business is always personal and ethical because it shapes the lives of people and the environment, and is often rigged against the powerless. The powerful insiders have privilege whether in the court system or the stock market. Their children receive the “best” of life, while others simply struggle to survive. God has a concern for the pain of the world – indeed God is “the fellow sufferer who understands” (Alfred North Whitehead), not as an observer, but from the inside – and God seeks to minimize preventable pain by working with our lives and our business and political structures to bring justice to the world. Despite individualistic interpretations of scripture favored in the USA, and especially by conservative Christians, the bible is through and through social and political in its ethics. Amos and the Psalmist are speaking directly to those in power, and Jesus’ words present a social critique and not just an individual call to action.

Amos challenges the powerful in politics, business, and religion to return to God by returning to God’s pathway of justice and care for the vulnerable. His words are harsh and the religious leaders of this theocratic system want to silence him. They have benefited, like the wealthy landowners, by injustice. They have turned away from the poor. They have failed to hear, or have chosen to be oblivious to the cries of the poor, and may even consciously benefit from injustice. But, God experiences the pain of the vulnerable, and eventually the scales of justice will be righted, and there will be hell to pay. When the religious leaders, the rightful ethical voices in the community, try to silence Amos, he is consumed with righteous indignation and in words that should be labeled “PG for Violent Content,” he assures them that they and their families will be among the first to receive divine punishment. They will feel the pain that God and the oppressed feel when their own beloved families are decimated. Their neglect of the poor will come back to haunt them.

Recently, a conservative Christian friend chided me on Facebook with the statement that “biblical ethics have nothing with do with government, but they are a matter of personal relationships or the ethics of the church.” Obviously, this person has never read Amos and the Hebraic prophets, whose primary targets are politicians, religious leaders, and business people, and the structural evils we take for granted or explicitly sanction. For the prophets, there is no “two kingdom” theology; we exist in “one realm,” interdependent in nature, in which God seeks Shalom and abhors injustice. So we must ask ourselves: What do these words say about our economics and the imbalances of wealth and the inequities in our justice system? Are we not also “guilty bystanders” or even perpetrators of injustice by our inaction, lifestyle, or preferential options?

Psalm 82 picks up the same theme with a question directed to us as well as Israel’s religious leaders: “How long will you defend the unjust and show partiality to the wicked?” As the poor know, whether they are involved in business or in the court system, the odds are stacked against them. There was anger among the children of Israel and there is anger in the USA today. God’s prophets challenge us: “Defend the cause of the weak and the fatherless; maintain the rights of the poor and oppressed. Rescue the weak and needy; deliver them from the hand of the wicked.” The unjust are often in the dark about their injustice and its consequences. Again, they benefit from the social order and believe that they are entitled to wealth and consideration. God sees things differently. God is not just concerned with the pain of poor and neglected; God is concerned with the causes of poverty and neglect. The scales will be balanced and seeing the light will be painful as well as liberating.

The prayer of Colossians is that we live a life worthy of the Lord. While the early Christian movement had no political power, relations within the community are important and reflect our relationship with God. God is worshipped in actions as well as words. Doctrines mean little if they don’t shape our care for one another. While the author is not talking politics and business, like the Psalmist or Amos, his words still convict us. Do our political sensibilities and business practices lead to words and behaviors worthy of God? Do we say the right things, believe the right doctrines, and then in our citizenship find ourselves lured by prejudice, hate speech by politicians, hardheartedness toward the poor and refugee? Have we succumbed to self-interest in the political realm, while espousing love in individual relationships? What does it mean to live a life worthy of God in the ballot box and halls of Congress?

Jesus’ parable of the Good Samaritan is strongly political, too. The hero is a stranger, looked down upon by the good people of the community. The passage does not condemn the religious leaders; it simply notes that they believed that they had better things to do than to help a wounded pilgrim. They needed to affirm the status quo, and insure that the order of worship be followed by their presence. The Temple needed to be cared for and services led. Order needed to be maintained in the religious realm and this trumped the call of the moment, even if the call is to respond to obvious human need. Only a hated foreigner – an undocumented worker, a refugee, a person of the “wrong” race and sexual orientation – stops to help, and then gives generously. God not only hears the cries of the poor. God inspires the outsider to be our spiritual teacher. God is moving in the have nots as well as the haves. God’s providence inspires the stranger and looked down upon as well as the insider and “ethically pure.” God’s love embraces us all, but those who pause to listen to God’s call in the moment embody God’s vision in this time and place.

Today’s readings may leave many of us, including the preacher, with an uneasy conscience. They may convict us of our own preferential option for comfort and security over justice. They may challenge our own neglect, or choice to avoid, the pain of the poor. When our senses are closed, when we justify business as usual, our hearts also close. How can we integrate self-interest with care for the broken and lost? How can we widen the scope of our well-being to include the well-being of others? This is more than optional generosity; God’s realm requires us to make structural changes that bring comfort to those in pain, power to the powerless, and justice to the oppressed.


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