Amos 8:4-7
Luke 16:1-23
Rev. Fa Lane
September 18, 2022
"One who is faithful in the smallest matters is also faithful in much.”
For the Sunday when we commission our Faith Formation teachers and ask a commitment from our learners, I am heartened by the wisdom of Jesus that says, “If we can be faithful in the small matters, we will be faithful in much”. I’m not hinting that the class sizes will be small. What I mean is that we will be using small building blocks to strengthen and grow. They are each a gem on their own: exploring spiritual depth, acts of service and the value of social interactions. Put together they will create a meaningful experience at Christ Church as we serve God and our neighbors and have fun doing it.
Today’s scriptures bring us the prophet Amos and his concern for the performance of religious rituals. He doesn’t want people to just go through the motions but to infuse them with righteousness. Sometimes we too sort of quickly get through a prayer or toss whatever we have in the offering basket, so Amos’s warning is relevant today too. The challenge the church faces in providing instruction and learning experiences is the competition among other necessary and enjoyable things in life. There’s only so much time but Amos would instruct us to keep as a priority our fidelity to God.
Like Amos, the New Testament Gospel writer, Luke was concerned with the suffering of the economically and legally exploited masses. The Old and New Testaments are texts we study in faith formation because together they reveal how God has related to people from the beginning of time as we know it. For those who study these texts, the challenge is not only to understand what they meant to the original audiences, but what do that mean for us today?
The first few times I read this Luke lesson, I heard it - as I always had – from the perspective of commerce because Jesus couched it in a story about a business manager. But, finally I came to see that Jesus didn’t indicate that the reward of faithfulness would be in economic terms. He just says, if we are faithful in small matters, that they add up to be significant in a larger context- notice he leaves the specifics out. Perhaps he assumes we understand that the larger context is that of living as a reflection of God’ love. So, for the teachers among us, remember: “If we train up the child in the way that they should go,” Proverbs tells us, “then when they are grown, they will not stray from it.” This is where we take a hand-mirror in front of us and say: We will not stray from what we learned in church.
There are four small things, that are not too complicated, I would ask of our teachers and learners to help us be successful.
· The first small act is to show up.
· The second is to be active in what’s going on.
· The third is to reflect on what you experience.
· The fourth is to pray for one another.
I was remembering when I was a young girl and our small church offerings in Sunday school class, the dimes and quarters we brought 50 years ago. We were helping the church do God’s work in the world. Learning that early engenders hearts that look for ways to help others in need. It’s a small act but it leads to generosity of spirit that can help many others.
Hear this story of Sojourners’ UCC in Charlottesville VA. It’s a small church that I have worshipped with. It doesn’t have a settled pastor, but they decided to do a fundraising campaign to forgive medical debt in the neighboring state of West Virginia. They worked with RIP Medical Debt, a New York based non-profit that purchases debt for pennies on the dollar. Sojourners joined with UCC churches in Maryland and West Virginia to raise $24,660. Multiply that by 10 from RIP Medical Debt. They abolished nearly $2.5M ($2,466,445.45) of medical debt for people in nearly all of the counties in WV.
They were faithful in contributing what they could and God multiplied their efforts so they were faithful in much.
It’s the little things you do that can turn the world upside down in a good way. Do you know the story about a young man who, upon seeing hundreds of starfish left behind in the receding tide, began to toss them one by one back into the ocean? Another person came along, looked at the magnitude of the job and said, “there are 100s of them! What difference will it make if you throw one back in.” Giving the next one a toss, he said “It makes a difference to that one!”
The moral and ethical foundation of our faith is developed not only in the church classroom but also on the beach saving animals, giving way while driving on the streets, and how we cheer at football games. What we study and discuss here should help us be better people out there. How we use our resources and our relationships should reflect our connection with God. And, our relationship with God shows up in our world view.
When I look at the world’s demeanor right now, at the levels of depression, anger, and self-righteousness, I mostly feel heavy, sad, worried, and exhausted. It feels insurmountable. I wish it was easy. I pray. I hope for things to get better.
But, I am concerned that financial burdens, political polarity, lies and disillusionment, housing situations, rising food costs, emotional isolation, depression, (the list can go on) will dampen our spark. Will we throw up our hands and claim defeat? Will we stop doing small acts of faith in God’s love and let negativity take over? I’m not willing to give up. But, I’m concerned that we will forego our commit to peace in the world. Peace within us and peace among us.
So, rather than admit defeat, what do we teach the children? Go back to those basics: Don’t give up, show up. Pay attention; be involved. Reflect on what you learn. Pray to see more clearly where God is at work in your life and making things better.
The chaos of the world seems like a big ball of wax with few exposed edges to tug on to unravel it That’s when I turn to the spiritual practices that I’ve learned in my own faith formation. That’s when I commit to act in the best way that I can to help someone. That’s when I want to be with others because the church taught me that salvation comes from life shared together in God’s love. I believe the power of love triumphs in the end. This is the hope I live with and so I stay faithful in the little things like daily prayer, daily times of silence, self care, generosity of spirit and truthfulness. For me, they make a big difference.
Amos seemed to rail against the empty performance of religious ritual. Some scholars even go so far as to say Amos is a voice against institutional religion. But, Dr. Julia O’Brien, with whom I studied at the Lancaster Theological Seminary, highlights in her commentary on Amos, that the Reformation of the Church sprang from Protestants who protesting practices in Roman Catholicism. The goal was not to eliminate religion, but to reformed it.
Indeed, theological scholar Phyllis Tickle suggested in her book Emergence Christianity, What it is, Where it is Going, and Why it Matters: that the church has these 500-year swings and we are in one now. She writes, “about every five hundred years the empowered structures of institutionalized Christianity, whatever they may be at that time, become an intolerable carapace (a shell) that must be shattered in order that renewal and new growth may occur.
For some, the idea of the church shattering in to a new order is frightening. It threatens they way of being church. They think it’s dying; but it’s just being reformed again. And, behind the re-ordering is new growth. That is what we can look forward to, for God is always making a new thing. Our own denomination has lived this re-ordering in its growing pains. In confirmation class the youth will learn about the success and the beauty of this larger tent that they are part of and see how it serves God and neighbor, regionally and nationally.
Let the new reformation commence with Christ Church initiating a new way of speaking truth and use nice words with civil rhetoric that brings out the best in us all. Let us extend kind generosity that is quick to forgive and offer grace when there is misunderstanding. It was the little things that Jesus did that made a big difference and actually set about a revolution. So, never underestimate the value of your words or a genuine act of caring for another.
Let me tell you how a small gesture can mean so much. In 2008, when I was battling breast cancer there was a low day when I was going for my infusion. I walked into the elevator of the medical center and removed my winter cap, revealing my bald-chemo head. Two women looked at me and smiled. One found something nice to say, complimenting my dangling earrings and the shape of my head. That brightened my whole countenance. That was a small matter, but it made a big difference. Sister Theresa would call that doing “Small things with Great Love”.
As we live through the weeks and months (maybe even years) of transition into that new thing that God is doing at Christ Church, keep doing the little things you do that make a big difference and helps our world feel more loving and more safe. Each day take your shot at reflecting God’s Love.
Be kind the child who is having a terrible, horrible no good, very bad day, even if they are acting “ugly”. Your compassion can turn the emotional tidal wave so they can maneuver better through the next one.
When a college student is negotiating a world different from the one they grew up in, listen to them over cups of tea as they unpack what they’re feeling. There are 100s of small ways you can make a difference and reflect God’s love to someone. Christ plays in a thousand places.
Thank you for showing up. Amen.
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