“When he laid his hands on her, immediately she stood up straight and began praising God. But the leader of the synagogue, indignant...”
Prayer: As we long for your voice, O God, help us not just to hear it, but to let it move us, to let it live in us, that we may experience your voice as a way to experience you, even through Christ Jesus our Lord. Amen.
I was in Pittsburgh on Thursday evening visiting our daughter, son, and a 5 month old grandson. And after the little lad was in bed, Barb and I watched a movie: The Tiger Rising. It just came out, so I’m not going to spoil the main stuff about the movie. But, let me give you some basics: it’s about a young boy and girl who discover a large, caged Bengal tiger in the woods. And they soon begin discussing whether or not it should be freed from its cage. The girl wants it to be freed, but the boy is not so sure. She’s thinking about what she thinks is best for the tiger. He’s worried that once it’s freed, it could be disastrous, like it might eat them! They try to sort out which voice to listen to. Which direction to take.
The movie plays on the metaphor that everyone has something that cages us in, something that restrains us, something that keeps us from being or becoming fully healthy, fully authentic. The boy holds onto a deep sorrow because his mother died a few months ago, and it was showing up as a bad rash on his legs. That sorrow caged him in. The girl has deep anger because her father left her and her over-bearing mother causing the girl to have a nasty, snobby attitude about everyone and everything. She was ostracized by her friends. Her anger caged her in.
Perhaps everyone of us has something that tends to cage us, to weigh us down, to bend us over, either emotionally or physically. Some false word, some negative voice that we bought into, and it takes life from us. What bends you over?
It seems to me that in both our Bible stories today, there is a weight, something that prevents growth, something that stunts faith, a distorted perspective, a negative voice… like Jeremiah’s certainty that God could not be calling him—because he’s young and inexperienced. God couldn’t possibly want him to be God’s mouthpiece to the land of Judah, right? But God saw Jeremiah differently. Because Jeremiah’s certainty was not faith. Certainty is the opposite of faith. If your faith becomes so certain of its rightness, then it’s no longer faith. God challenged Jeremiah’s certainty: “You shall go, and you shall speak (and God touched his lips) and I will be with you,” said God. And, Jeremiah listened to God’s voice.
Luke writes that the woman in front of Jesus has a spirit that is weighing her down, crippling her, taking her strength away, preventing her from standing up straight and it’s been happening for 18 years. That’s a long time! And when Jesus perceives ahead of time that it is spiritual disease that showed up in her body, he says to her, “Woman, you are set free from your ailment.”
Now, watch this everyone—the Greek word for ‘set free’ is the same word used for “loosened, or released, or unbound, even disintegrated.” And the word for ‘ailment’ literally means “strengthlessness.” So, in other words, Jesus said that the grip that the spirit had on the woman, that sapped her strength and energy, was loosened, released, even disintegrated. And with Jesus’ words and then his touch, she was made straight and upright again, not only physically, but her uprightness meant her dignity was restored. She stood tall and praised God. She listened to Jesus’ voice of release and her strength was restored.
Now, the woman is not the only one bent over in this story. The ruler of the synagogue also was bent over with a disease, but I’m thinking he didn’t know he had the disease of legalism. You know, the kind that makes a person so dang certain about the rules and regs that he would rather have the woman remain in her state of strengthlessness, staying quiet, not disrupting the status quo and social norms, and especially not disrupting the law of God!
So, don’t even think about doing a healing on the Sabbath day Jesus, because the rules about the Sabbath prevent such things. That’s the voice of legalism. So, when Jesus healed the woman on the Sabbath day, it made the synagogue ruler mad. Indignant.
But, Jesus not only heals the woman, he also takes the synagogue leader to task about his legalism. Whose voice are you going to listen to, Mr. Synagogue leader? The voice of the law or God’s voice coming from the spirit of Judaism? Judaism has always justified temporarily setting aside Sabbath rules for any condition that was life-threatening or strength-sapping. Whatever people needed to do to survive and thrive was always permitted on the Sabbath.
And if you’re going to be upset about something, Mr. Synagogue leader, why don’t you get upset about pitting people’s needs for surviving and thriving against the demands of Sabbath observance? Why don’t you get upset at choosing the voice of the law and social norms over the love that God has for people, no matter who they are, or where they are on life’s journey?
To be honest, that’s what makes me upset sometimes. When people take the words of this book literally [hold up the Bible] and often out of context, and weaponize the words, using them to keep someone bent over! Crippled. Hushed up. Marginalized. Using these words to keep someone from living an authentic life. Using these words to promote hatred. Instead of using these words to restore, heal, and reconcile which is the overall message of God’s good news– the gospel of Jesus Christ!
Whose voice are you going to listen to, Mr. and Mrs. and Ms. Righteous Church leader? Whose voice are you going to listen to, Mr. and Mrs. and Ms. Politician? The voice of the law? The voice of Constitutional literalism? The voice of biblical literalism?
Or the voice of God? The voice of Jesus Christ that says it’s never wrong to restore, heal, reconcile on the Sabbath or any other day? The voice of interpretive scripture that says God is a God of love and grace, a God of forgiveness and mercy. The voice that says God is a God of acceptance and welcome!
Jesus’ thinking and this gospel message is not just for today. It’s for tomorrow, too. And Tuesday. And Wednesday. All week long. It’s for next Sunday, too.
Obviously, we can come to church on Sunday to worship God and hear that message of good news. But, I believe God’s voice is Still speaking outside the church’s walls on all days of the week. I encourage us to tune our ears and sharpen the focus of our eyes. Let’s take note where and when God’s voice is speaking, inviting us to listen.
So, check this out—are you familiar with the Japanese style poetry called senryu? It’s a haiku-style poem with the first line being 5 syllables, the second line is 7, and the third line is 5 again, all unrhymed. And instead of being about nature, these poems examine human nature.
So, during the pandemic, an anonymous artist began traveling the country, installing highway signs featuring senryu poems. The artist made them in standard issue highway sign format—cobalt blue, with a white border and white letters. All in all, 23 of these signs were installed in various cities, all unauthorized, I might add. Some were taken down because of legalities and vandalism, etc. Here are some examples—now tell me that you don’t hear God’s voice in these:
When you were still young
Did you ever dream about
Being who you are—Memphis, Tennessee
Here’s another:
I hope that in both
Love and compassion
You can be brutal—Doral, Florida
I liked this one:
I really needed
To remember feeling that
I was love able—Coconut Grove, Miami, Florida
And my favorite:
Foolish to hold back
For love is giving and
Love is forgiving—Mount Prospect, Illinois
Do you hear God’s voice?
roadside senryū (roadsidesenryu.com)
They’re kind of like those God-billboards we’ve seen every now and then. The anonymous artist was finally tracked down and asked why he or she did these signs. The answer was a need to feel connected. “Roadside Senryu sought to provide levity and remind people that human connection runs deeper than divisions. The artist said, “I wanted to let people know that no one was going through any of this [pandemic] alone” (The Story Behind the Whimsical Road-Sign Poems Popping Up Along America’s Highways - Outside Online, retrieved August 20, 2022). Check out the website.
So, people of God, whose voice do we listen to? Let’s listen for a voice that calls for a different lifestyle for us to live. I don’t want to say it’s a new lifestyle for us to live, because it’s not new. It’s been around for-evuh! It’s the voice that calls us to Jesus’ way of life. It calls us to live out what God values. It’s a voice that releases us from being bent over. To stand tall. It’s a voice that calls us to speak of God’s good news of love and grace, forgiveness and mercy, acceptance and welcome for everyone.
Let’s rejoice in the wonderful things God does and continues to do with us and for us. Listen to God’s voice. Amen.
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