Proper 15A; Isaiah
56:1-8; Rom. 11: 13-15, 29-32; Matt. 15:21-28
St. Paul’s Smithfield,
8/20/2017; Jim Melnyk, “Pushy Faith”
Some of you may recall hearing me tell a story about two
monks who come across one another in the wilderness. The first monk, glaring at the other for some
unknown reason, takes his staff and draws a line in the dirt between the two of
them. The second monk looks for a few
minutes at the line on the ground, and then at his fellow monk. Finally, taking his own staff, he draws a circle
in the dirt around both of them. After a
few moments of deafening silence, the first monks face is transformed. Knowing himself to be accepted and welcomed
where he had expected animosity and rejection, he drops his staff to the ground,
and embraced his brother.
We human beings are quite accomplished at drawing lines in
the sand – and not quite as accomplished at drawing circles.
The story of the Canaanite woman in Matthew’s gospel is a
story about centuries-old lines and about the drawing of circles – and the
radical surprise that finds Jesus as the one drawing the lines in the sand,
while the Canaanite woman turns out to be the one who teaches Jesus not just to
draw circles – but about the need for him to make his circles even wider! Not only that, we see the same lesson being
taught by Paul in his letter to the Church in Rome as well.
Simply put, Jesus is ready to turn his back on the Canaanite
woman for two reasons. First, Canaanites
were centuries-old enemies of Israel.
The woman is a descendent of those whom Joshua was supposed to drive out
of the land so long ago. Second, Jesus
seems to understand his call, for the most part at this time, as one that is
only to the “lost sheep of the house of Israel.” This reality only makes sense if we’re
willing to accept that Jesus has to grow into mission – that just like us, he doesn’t
always see all the details of the pathway he will one day take.
The Canaanite woman and her daughter are distractions that
seem to be getting in the way of his time set apart to teach his
disciples. The two are no more than dogs
according to Jesus – and don’t let anyone fool you. Jesus didn’t call them puppies – it wasn’t
meant as a cute term of endearment.
Jesus called them dogs – a common insult in his day.
Jesus draws a line in the sand between himself and the
Canaanite woman, and she, perhaps unknowingly arguing with the deep wisdom of
gospel truth, draws a circle which includes them both. She reminds Jesus that there is no room for
prejudice and discrimination in the kingdom of God. I can almost hear her reminding Jesus of
Isaiah’s words: “Maintain justice, Jesus, and do what is right! Heal my daughter!” And Jesus, having been
schooled by a Gentile woman, must have roared with laughter at his own expense.
Paul has been running into some of the same experiences of
prejudice as the Canaanite woman. He’s
been dealing with the Gentile followers of Jesus living in Rome, some of whom
seem to think that Judaism has been superseded by this new religion. Paul argues with pride that he is an
Israelite and member of the tribe of Benjamin.
He emphatically proclaims that God does not reject the heirs of Abraham
(Romans 11:2). There is no place for
prejudice and discrimination in Paul’s faith communities either.
In other words, in today’s lessons we have a Canaanite woman
who argues that the people who conquered her ancestors have not supplanted her
right to God’s love and mercy, just as Paul argues that those who follow Christ
have not supplanted the Jews – have not supplanted the very people of which he,
Paul, and Jesus, are a part.
Author Barbara Brown Taylor reminds us that “Over and over,
God’s call to us means pushing old boundaries, embracing outsiders, giving up
the notion that there is not enough…to go around. We may resist,” she writes; “we may even lose
our tempers, but the call of God is insistent, as insistent as the Canaanite
woman who would not leave Jesus alone.
The call of God keeps after us, calling us by name, until finally we
step over the lines we have drawn for ourselves and discover a whole new world
on the other side” (Barbara Brown Taylor in The
Seeds of Heaven, quoted in Synthesis).
In essence, we are called to embrace a “pushy faith.” And when we look closely enough, we find that
we have a God who is just as pushy as the Canaanite woman – perhaps that’s
where she gets it from – a part of the divine image alive and active in her. But the truth is, we’re not comfortable with pushy
people, or with a pushy God, when either one calls us to account for our
brokenness – challenging us to be transformed, or calls us to stand up on
behalf of others who are hurting – challenging society to be transformed.
What we will find, if we’re open enough and brave enough to
seek, is that Holy Scripture is filled with strong women, and strong men, who
stand firm when told to mind their place, and who step up when God gives them a
push – or even just a nudge. Holy
Scripture is filled with those who are willing to get in other people’s spaces,
and even in their faces, to help bring about the kingdom – or kin-dom of God in
this world. The Canaanite woman in
today’s gospel lesson is one of them. Bold
and desperate, out of love for her daughter, she refuses to let the disciples
or Jesus off the hook, and her daughter is healed.
A few of us talked about today’s gospel during Theology on
Draft the other night. The next morning
Curtis Brookshire sent me a link to a story he heard on NPR. A 65 year-old African American woman named
Francine Anderson tells a story about a night 60 years ago along a road in
rural Virginia. Her father made the
mistake of running out of gas in a sparsely populated area – at night – with
his wife and children in the car. He
pushed his car along the road until he came to a single gas station with a sign
that read, “Whites Only.”
Her father went to the door with his hat in hand, trying to
look as small and unassuming as possible, only to be rudely turned away by the
owner. “I don’t deal with your kind,” he
growled before slamming the door.
Back in the car the father was faced with questions from his
children. “Why can’t we go?” “Why won’t he give us any gas?” And at five years of age it suddenly occurs
to Francine, “This is a dangerous world. We’re in real trouble.”
“It is not fair to take the children’s food and throw it to
the dogs” (15:26).
Thankfully, Francine tells us, the owner’s son comes out a
few minutes later, apologizing for his father’s actions, and gives Francine’s
family the gas they need without taking any money. Francine gets mixed responses to the story,
she tells us.
When white people hear her tell the story, they focus on the
kindness and generosity of the man’s son.
On the other hand, she says, “When I talk to blacks about that story
they’re more focused on the fact that it wasn’t illegal for [the owner] to deny
them gas.” The son’s kindness should not
have been necessary, had attitudes and laws been gospel-oriented. http://www.npr.org/2017/08/18/544264905/after-60-years-girls-experience-at-whites-only-gas-station-still-hurts
“It’s not fair to take the children’s food….” But at least the son gives us a glimpse into
the hope God holds for our world – that as the kingdom of heaven on earth, we
might do more than just find our way around attitudes, rules and laws that
restrict and oppress.
The dream of God is that as people of faith, filled with the
Spirit of God, we might create a world where such laws, and the attitudes
behind those laws, might become a part of our history we would be embarrassed
to memorialize and hold dear.
In the end, “The Divine compassion for all who suffer” means
more to Jesus than time alone with his disciples, or ancient racial and ethnic
animosity. A gentile woman is not only
received by Jesus, but her daughter is healed.
And whereas Peter was chided in last week’s lesson for having little
faith, this woman – this enemy of Israel – is celebrated for her great faith.
In the end, God calls us – in the end God pushes us – to
step over the lines we so expertly draw in the sand, and discover the kingdom
of heaven waiting for us on the other side.
No comments:
Post a Comment