Matthew 21: 23-32 Rev.
Philippians 2: 1-13
October 1, 2023
Dr. Galen E. Russell III
“… make my joy complete: be of the same mind, having the same love, being in full accord and of one mind.”
Prayer: Open the eyes of our hearts, Lord, so that we can see you and others in our world as your children. In Christ we offer our prayers. Amen.
Today is World Communion Sunday. It’s good to ponder the oneness, the unity the world experiences today. Because all kinds of diverse people are remembering Jesus and his Last Supper. For a 24 hour period, maybe we are just a little bit closer to the one world Jesus, and Paul, and much of the New Testament envisions. A world where believers in Jesus may all be one (John 17: 20-24), sharing in the same meal.
But does oneness mean sameness? Does one world mean that everyone is the same? Has the same interests? Does the same things? Has the same political beliefs? Does sameness mean there’s no one on the margins? Where everyone’s the same in the middle? Where everyone has the same sexual orientation? Does the one world God that envisions mean that everyone has the same religious beliefs? Goes to the same church? BOR-RING!
And totally unrealistic. Because there no way everyone in the world abandons their own religious practices in favor of one overall “right” religion. In the end all Muslims are not becoming Christians. Or, vice-versa. Nor the Buddhist, or the Hindu. There’s no way people trying to live authentic lives will stop doing that, nor should they be asked to. That’s just not reality. Nor is it fair.
Maybe that’s why I think that’s not what Jesus wanted, or Paul, or any other New Testament writer. Because we have diversity. It’s with us. It’s our human condition.
No, if there’s any sameness, if there’s any being of the same mind, having the same love, being in full accord, it’s not about shutting down diversity. Or about believing in one correct religion. I think Jesus and Paul and others envisioned that one world comes when we live in communion with God. And that’s when God-qualities come out. Love, grace, mercy, forgiveness, patience, generosity, acceptance, humility… you know them. Living these God-qualities in our lives makes God’s energy come alive in us and we become God’s will. And even the most messed up among us can experience life with God, the kindom of God.
Which is why I think Jesus was so scandalous in his day. Because he had the preposterous idea that common, ordinary, broken, screwed-up people are acceptable in God’s realm just by living in communion with God, being influenced by God-qualities, and by being and doing God’s will! What drove Jesus’ enemies crazy was his criticism of perfect religious people who said they would do God’s will, didn’t, and his acceptance of the imperfect nonreligious people who did! Not only acceptance, but Jesus said they will experience God’s kingdom way before the perfect ones!
Last Wednesday evening at our Melodies and Discoveries Bible Study class on Romans we discovered that for Paul, the truly authentic Jew or Christian was not one who followed all the laws of the Torah, but one who does God’s will, no matter if a Jew or non-Jew. No matter if one professes a certain religion, or certain brand of Christianity, or not. Living in communion with God enables us live out God-qualities and be the will of God. This is acceptable to God. This is having the same mind that Paul writes about.
Makes me wonder if ecumenism and inter-faith projects will grow in strength over the next decades. People ask me if the church will be here in twenty years. Without a doubt it will still be here. It may be different. There may be more inter-faith events going on. More cooperative faith partnerships surrounding some of the critical issues of our planet. But it’ll be here.
Like last August when the Parliament of the World’s Religions was held in Chicago. More than 6,500 religious leaders from 95 countries registered for the parliament. As part of the parliament, a water ceremony took place on Lake Michigan. Water from different parts of the world was combined and poured into the lake in a symbolic ceremony highlighting the need to be good stewards of the fresh water on the planet for all people all over the world (from Religious News Service, August 14, retrieved from Seen and Heard, The Christian Century, October 2023, pg. 13). The religious leaders got together and experiencedo ne world around a planetary concern.
So, if there is to be one world, maybe it comes about by people living in communion with God. When decisions are based on love and grace, mercy and forgiveness of others. When God-qualities of patience and generosity, acceptance and humility are powerfully at work in our lives. When we see life not through political spectrums, not through our ideologies, not through the rules found in the Bible, but we see issues through the eyes of faith, we see life through the eyes of our hearts. Hearts of faith. Hearts of grace. Because when we see right into our circumstances through the eyes of the heart, people worlds apart can come together to be one world.
There is a man named Mike who worships on and off at the Lutheran church where Rev. Peter Marty is the pastor. When Mike walks in, you can’t miss him. He comes in making his way tapping with a cane. A friend is often with him making sure that Mike knows about uneven sidewalks and other obstacles because Mike has been blind since birth.
After worship one day, Mike came through the receiving line to greet Peter. And without even thinking, Peter said, “Hi Mike, it’s great to see you today.” The second Peter said that, he wished he could have taken it back and offered another greeting. Because Peter spoke from the place of being privileged with sight to a guy who can’t see. His world was completely different.
But Mike beautifully disarmed the whole situation. “Well,” he said with his usual warmth and genuineness, “It’s great to see you, too, Pastor” (Marty, Peter, “Eyes of the heart,” The Christian Century, October 2023, pg. 1).
I absolutely love that story! Because here are two men who live in different worlds. One lives in a world of light. The other, darkness. One lives with relative ease because he can see. The other with relative hardship because he is blind. One sees the world as it is, through eyes in his head giving him actual images of real things. The other sees the world in his mind’s eye, through the eyes of his heart and his other senses helping him to see images of real things, sometimes his visual acuity is sharper than most of ours.
Two worlds. And yet, with one comment… one remark offered with warmth and sincerity, with genuineness and love and humility, not to mention with a wonderful sense of humor… with one comment, their different worlds became one world.
May it be that way for us, too, as we remember Jesus. Because with his one act on the cross, all of us in our own different little worlds can become part of one world. God’s world. In communion with God. Doing the will of God. In community with others. Amen.
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