"Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. I myself will be with you every day until the end of this present age." -Matthew 28:19-20

Sunday, December 18, 2011

An Unlikely Adoption

Imagine that an application is filed by a married couple to adopt a child. The married couple are very low income, without health insurance. They spent years as illegal immigrants. They are poor, uneducated, and live in a small rural location. They have no connections to wealth and power. When the mother gave birth to a child, it was in a barn. The child was born in a feeding trough that had undoubtedly not been properly sanitized. When the birth occurred, the father and mother were surrounded by a rough looking biker gang. Imagine the impression that this couple would make on an agent of the Department of Children Services in Tennessee in connection with their application for adoption.

The couple that I just described is Mary and Joseph. I have thrown in a few anachronisms for good measure (e.g. there was no health insurance in the ancient world). I have also changed the shepherds to a biker gang, since a biker gang is the closest cultural equivalent today to the perception of shepherds in Jesus' time, in my opinion.

Mary and Joseph were simple Jewish Mediterranean peasants. And God chose Mary and Joseph for adoption of His Son, Jesus. God could have chosen to place Jesus with the family of the Chief Priest. God could have chosen to place Jesus with the family of King Herod.

God's decision to place Jesus with Mary and Joseph speaks volumes about what matters to God, and about what does not matter to God. God does not care about earthly wealth, power, and prestige. If God did, God would have chosen to entrust Jesus to Mary and Joseph, and God would not have been revealed in a Jewish Mediterranean peasant named Jesus.

God cares about whether we are people of love, compassion, mercy, faithfulness, and justice. God saw these characteristics in Mary and Joseph. This is how God measures worth. It is how we should measure worth as well.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Discipleship Is a Highway

The Hebrew Bible lesson in the Revised Common Lectionary for this Second Sunday of Advent contains an interesting metaphor for discipleship from Isaiah--building a highway:

In the wilderness prepare the way of the LORD, make straight in the desert a highway for our God. Every valley shall be lifted up, and every mountain and hill be made low; the uneven ground shall become level, and the rough places a plain. Then the glory of the LORD shall be revealed, and all people shall see it together, for the mouth of the LORD has spoken."

This image also begins Mark's gospel.

I spent the week thinking about this image and about highways in general. Think about our interstate highway system. Begun during the Eisenhower administration in the 1950's, the interstate highway system here in the United States was, arguably, the most ambitious, expensive, and complicated public works project in human history. Construction began in the mid 50's, and the first phase of highway building was not completed until the mid 1970's.

Think for a moment about the enormous effort needed to construct a highway. The architectural and engineering feats, the legal issues concerning acquisition of land by eminent domain, hiring employees, manufacturing raw materials--the tasks just go on and on.

We typically think that the real work of discipleship--the highway building, is where we go into the world to transform the world and be ambassadors of Christ. But that is actually the easy part. The hard part--the part that requires the real work and effort, is building the highway. Our heart and mind is the highway, and we have to clear out all the nonsense and falsehood so that God can enter in. The interstates were constructed so that things could get from one place to another, so that our government and economy could work more effectively. The highways were a means to an end. Discipleship is about opening our hearts and minds to allow God to enter in and show us how to be Christ for others in our place and time.

The biggest mistake, in fact, made by disciples down through the ages is rushing out to do God's work without first building the highway--that is, to assume that our agenda is God's agenda without opening up our minds and hearts to the new plan and work that God has in mind for us.

The greatest news during Advent is that God wants to travel up our own highway to transform us, out of love for us and for the world. God has not given up on us, and God will never give up on us. In fact, God loves us so much that God was willing to be born among us as a child to show us the fullness of God's presence.