Teach me your way, O Lord, that I may walk in your truth…For great is your steadfast love for me…you, O Lord, are…merciful and gracious…slow to anger…you, Lord, have helped and comforted me. [Psalm 86:11a, 13a, 15a, 17b]
When we cry, "Abba! Father!" is that very Spirit bearing witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, then...heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ...But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience." [Romans 8:15b-17a, 25]
[Jesus] answered, "The one who sows the
good seed is the Son of Man; the field is the world, and the good seed are the
children of the kingdom; the weeds are the children of the evil one, and the
enemy who sowed them is the devil; the harvest is the end of the age, and the
reapers are the angels...The Son of Man will send his angels, and they will
collect...all causes of sin and all evildoers, and...throw them into the
furnace...Then the righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their
Father. [Matthew
13:37-42a, 43a]
To
begin this week’s readings, we have a 3 verse snippet of a slightly longer
chapter of Isaiah. Essentially we hear about the singularity of God: I
am the first, and I am the last. We’ve heard the connection between
God and God’s people elsewhere in the Bible and it is what we have all been
taught for generations beyond generations, yet, there’s a whole sermon waiting
to be written about how this concept of “one God” aka monotheism has
been co-opted from the understanding of early Judaism. In ancient times it was
assumed that there were other deities who had their own limited things to do
and spheres of influence. Israel’s God, however, was intended to be an
exclusive relationship and commitment by Israel as God’s chosen, as no other
god equals Israel’s God. There’s much to consider but in the interest of time
and space, it was the onset of the 17th century with world
conquering and domination by the West. Those leaders determined that cultures
with multiple gods were inferior. The concept of monotheism as the only
way was developed and used as a method of continuing the power of the conquerors
and it spread back to their own lands. As Reed Carson writing for
WorkingPreacher.com says: Ironically, this naïve self-assurance places
Christian theologians in a similar position to what texts like Isaiah 44 sought
to correct…Today a host of rival gods contend for our affection and
adoration…Among these rival deities are the Christian Nationalist God, the
spirits of Profit and Growth, and demons like Patriarchy and White Supremacy.
Each of these…has found ways to demand of us sacrifices, oaths of loyalty, and
(perhaps most ruinous) awestruck fear.
In a slight
departure, this Psalm gives us many quotations from the Torah, the first five
books of the Hebrew/Old Testament, and some also appear in other psalms. The
Psalmist doesn’t seem to worry at all about people with their other gods. The
primary affirmation is that our God is gracious and full of
compassion, slow to anger and abounding in love and kindness. These
words are to give us the freedom and conviction that we can appeal directly to
God, as the Psalmist speaks to his own trust and expectation that even those
“others” will come to worship the One.
Paul speaks to our
inward groaning and mortal struggles to avoid the deeds of the
body as he exhorts us to hope for what we do not
see and wait for it with patience.
But it is this parable
of Jesus, often known as the wheat and the tares [noxious weeds that
resemble the wheat sprouts], that offers us a lesson in prudent personal
agronomy. It takes an experienced farmer/gardener to know the difference
between seedlings that grow into the desired plants and those that produce
invasive, destructive weeds. The Master of this field wisely leaves well enough
alone, as at maturity, the reapers will have no difficulty in distinguishing
the wheat from the weeds, knowing which to save and which to burn.
While the Master
of this story blames an enemy for the deliberate seeding of tares in
his field, we can look to ourselves for the crop of noxious weeds we ourselves
produce. One grows each time we point a finger in disgust or hate, however
self-righteous and correct we believe we are. Another shoots up each time we
judge and belittle those we believe to be the enemy of our personal agenda
(even if they are). The next grows tall every time we decide who is an
undesirable and useless plant growing where it isn't wanted. And half an acre
at least rises up especially when we believe we know who God
will ~ or should ~ burn. It is so easy to sow another seed of soul-destroying
rubbish in our own spiritual ground, reducing it to an unholy dump.
The message is
pretty clear, and always difficult: it's not our job to reap the harvest and
separate the weeds from the wheat. We are called to be the good seeds, the
children of the kingdom, to be fruitful and nourish the fields of the Lord. In
growing strong in Christ together, we will crowd out temptation, resist and
lessen the impact of the noxious weeds of various kinds of -isms sown in
God's Creation. The true and fertile seeds of the Spirit are ready to sprout.
God is the true and only judge of the hearts of others. As the most
famous line in the old Walt Kelly cartoon, the main character Pogo says: We
have met the enemy and he is us.
Jesus came to save the fallen, not just the faithful. Let us not be tare-ing around to prove ourselves better than others and to argue every point of disagreement. Let us climb out of the weeds we plant in ourselves, that demean others by our attitudes and actions, however unwitting and well-intended, and demean us also. Let us not be as an enemy regardless of another’s attitude and actions. God, and only God, is the One to tear the tare out of the wheat of life and living.
LET US, GOD’S PEOPLE, PRAY
Leader: ~ O Lord our God
lead us, Your children, by Your Spirit, to labor with patience and hope in Your
fields, to gather for ourselves and all Creation, the everlasting freedom of
Your Glory.
Merciful and Gracious God
RESPONSE: Our Help and our Comfort
~ O Lord our God, impel the hearts
and souls of all who govern our World, our Country, and our Community, to tear
out the choking tendrils of the deadly contagion of inequity, injustice, and personal
greed, so to save and prosper the lives of all Your people. We pray especially
for: add your own petitions
Merciful and Gracious God
Our Help and our Comfort
~ O Lord our God, relieve the pain
and despair from those who suffer with illness, injury, or addiction, and
sustain the strength of those who give support. We now join our hearts to pray
for those in need… add your own petitions
Merciful and Gracious God
Our Help and our Comfort
~ O Lord our God, we lift up and
release those who have departed into the joyous welcome of Your glorious and
forever Heaven. We pray especially for… add your own petitions
Merciful and Gracious God
Our Help and our Comfort
~ O Lord our God, we pause in this
moment to offer You our other personal thanksgivings, intercessions, petitions,
and memorials… add your own petitions
Merciful and Gracious God
Our Help and our Comfort
~ O Lord our God, we commend to
You, with gratitude, those who have committed their lives to us in Your
service. Bless, inspire, and uphold them, as they work with and for us, to
guide us always toward You. We pray especially for: add your own
petitions
Merciful and Gracious God
Our Help and our Comfort
The Celebrant adds: Abba! Father! Sow in us a longing to clear away
the weeds of sin and doubt within, and to prosper our spiritual ground with
good seed and great hope, that we may shine like the sun in Your Eternal
Kingdom. We ask through Jesus, our Strength and our Redeemer; and the Holy
Spirit, our Soul Guide and our Wisdom; who together with You reign as One God,
now and forever. Amen.




