This space is devoted to sharing the sermons preached at Park View Mennonite Church, in Harrisonburg, Virginia. Please feel free to read, listen to, or watch any of these sermons, and then offer your comments, questions, or reflections, using the "comment" link at the end of each sermon. May these sermons challenge you to think and to act in new ways, and to grow in grace and in faithfulness to God's call.
God calls Samuel: ‘Here I am!’ Listen! God is Calling! Fall 2021 Narrative Lectionary 1 Samuel 3:1-21
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I am a sucker for videos on Facebook. I get mesmerized and drawn in by cake decorating. All the sudden I realize I’ve spend 10 minutes or more of my day watching flowers appear from the ends of piping bags and beauty crafted from butter and sugar. The thing is the algorithms learn what you like and they give you more of it. Lately, I watched a video of a young girl, maybe 7 or 8 years old, playing a stringed instrument with gusto, backed by an orchestra. Thus my newsfeed has flooded with videos of talented children playing complicated musical pieces in front of large audiences long before we think they are old enough to manage the skill and the pressure of it.
How many of us have heard sermons on Samuel’s calling and have held up our hands and sung with heartfelt commitment “here I am, Lord. Is it I Lord. I have heard you calling in the night…”. I know I have done that!
I’ve also learned - careful what you say “yes” to, God may take that “yes” seriously!
This is a story of deep listening, communal discernment and then speaking through trembling lips the words that will make our leaders and communities ears tingle. Words not for the individual direction but for the communal good. Its not an individualistic call of where am I going with my life – but God giving words that will not fall aside or to the ground. Words that we are scared to speak but that we know come from the deeper heart of something far beyond us.
Many of us have a stilted relationship with the Old Testament. We like some of the stories but it is also mixed in with a bunch of law and guts and gore and we don’t think we agree with it. So we dip in for the parts of the story we like. Cut it off when it gets to the verse that might complicate things. The gift of the narrative lectionary is that we get to put this in the context of the larger story and its also the challenge of not cutting it off when we like the ending, but reading the whole chapter. So often I have heard this story up to verse 10. We like the back and forth of Samuel jumping up at the sound of his name being called and finally recognizing that he needs to stay and listen to the voice of God. What God says to Samuel after God calls to him is not something life affirming, even though it does set Samuel on a vocational path. It is a message of punishment for those not respecting God and there is not a way out, sacrifices, confession and changed ways wont work here.
What God actually says gets difficult. There will be punishment and Eli, Samuel’s mentor, can’t make it better.
Throughout the Old Testament we zoom in and out. We hear the stories of individuals and then we zoom out and hear of the treatment of a people, their movements, their wars, their struggles and their decisions.
I listen to many commentators as we pick up this story from where we left off last week,
“Samuel lives in a precarious time when “the word of the LORD was rare” (verse 1). This is a continuation of the problem at the end of book of Judges where “all the people did what was right in their own eyes” (Judges 21:25). Indeed, 1 Samuel 2 speaks of how Eli’s own sons did what was right in their own eyes in their work as priests (1 Samuel 2:11-17). The times are as dark as the night that falls at the beginning of the story.”
“The nation was falling apart. The system of judgeships had failed miserably. With all of the chaos, how could the community possibly continue? Would it die before it began? Would the promise God made to Abraham go unfulfilled? Who would God send to begin to deal with this mess? Samuel, Israel’s last judge and first prophet since Moses, is God’s answer.
(Slide Bible Time line)
Samuel was born at a pivotal point in Israel’s history. He represents Israel’s transition from a loose system of judges to a unified monarchy. The writer introduces the reader to Samuel by first introducing his mother, Hannah. Hannah’s story is the perfect segue for this transition because her story is diametrically opposed to stories of abuse and sexual objectification of women in Judges.
Samuel doesn’t know who God is yet, but we do. This is the same God who still gave Sarah a baby even after she laughed at God’s messenger. The same God who had a conversation with Moses when Moses pushed back on his calling. The same God who got angry at the People of Israel when they complained in the desert that they were hungry after they were miraculously freed from slavery.
Maybe we really are made in God’s image – complex, intense, emotional, compassionate and seeking out relationship even when that is not straight forward and holds disappointment. This is a God who is a truth teller, calling folks to follow even through their fear, even as they get to know this voice and this character of who God is.
We are transitioning with the People of Israel into a difficult part of their history. A coming towards and then a falling away from God. Maybe this isn’t that unfamiliar to us and is also part of our story today. What are the misuses of power and the corruption that we need to confront? How is what we hold as important shifting and our leadership may need to shift with it? How do we keep listening deeply?
How do we honor young and old? Honor youthful energy and responsiveness like Samuel’s, and the discernment from years of a life like Eli’s. How do we make space to hear and hear again until we discern who and what is calling. Even if our eyes are dim, can we clarify our hearing so we recognize the voice of God saying our name or the name of a person we are walking with.
Just as Samuel’s calling and message were for Eli and the people of Israel. Eli’s discernment, that it was God’s voice and his insistence for Samuel to speak the directions aloud, helped Samuel step into his role as prophet and claim his voice in passing on the word of God. Callings aren’t just for us and we might not notice them without the work of the community. This is hard to hear because in our individualistic society we are focused on our selves. And we don’t want to speak hard words to another. If we are a good person we don’t judge, right??
Yet the prophetic voice of Samuel was for the community. Samuel was willing to be the vessels of God’s voice to the world. Willing to speak the hard and uncomfortable truth that had to be voiced.
(Slide of Malala)
I see those today who speak up for a better world for all. Malala, fighting for the rights of girls in Pakistan and for freedom of education.
(Slide of Greta)
Greta Thunberg, whose climate activism draws attention to the dangerous trajectory we are on in our relationship to the earth. And others who are lesser known but no less important.
(Slide of the three)
Autumn Peltier, a Canadian first nations water activist who started to speak out for clean water at age 8. Mari Copeny, who has the nickname Little Miss Flint. Mari spoke up about the intersection of state negligence and environmental racism that we still see playing out in places like Flint, Michigan. And Xiye Bastida, an indigenous young woman from Mexico who moved to New York City. Xiye saw droughts and floods in her hometown and now raises her voice for climate justice. Calling us all to care for the earth that we are part of just as it is part of us.
(Blank screen)
“The Lord was with Samuel as he grew up, and (God) let none of Samuel’s words fall to the ground. And all Israel from Dan to Beersheba recognized that Samuel was a trust-worthy prophet of the Lord.” V 19-20
God is still calling trustworthy truth-tellers into our midst.
“God’s call comes when we least expect it and often to those we least expect. God is always the God of surprises. We as the church need to be like Eli, encouraging all to hear the voice that calls them forth into all that they were created to be. At the same time, we help each other to tell the truth even when the truth is hard to hear.” (https://www.workingpreacher.org/commentaries/narrative-lectionary/call-of-samuel/commentary-on-1-samuel-31-21-2)
Can we see and can we hear? May we embrace even God’s uncomfortable callings and speak out for a better world for all.
— Moriah Hurst, October 17, 2021
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Called To Trust In God: God provides manna and quail Listen! God is Calling! Fall 2021 Narrative Lectionary Exodus 16
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Without fail, digging into the Old Testament leads to wondering about the God being portrayed there. Whether it’s a God who asks a father to sacrifice a son, and then at the last second withdraws the request, or it’s a God who seems to wink at, if not approve of, people who lie and deceive their own family to steal a blessing, or . . . just about anywhere we turn, we run into stories not only of strange cultural practices, but in many ways, a strange God . . . at least, a God who doesn’t seem a lot like Jesus. And we haven’t even gotten into the war and conquest stories yet. What do we do about these pictures of God, other than quietly avoid them, which is a typical Christian response? I get it why some people don’t read the Old Testament much. They would rather read Gospel. Good News. But . . . to turn away from the Hebrew Scriptures, is to turn away from gold, to miss the hidden treasure. What we have here is a story of God through human eyes, which of course, is the only kind of God story that we have. And here we see what the people saw in God, in retrospect, through their own cultural framework. A limited view, naturally. But even in these rough sketches of God, a beautiful picture begins to emerge. We catch golden glimpses of the God we know in Jesus. The Gospel can be found right here in these ancient stories. But, like panning for gold, we may have to stir up the waters a bit, to find the piece that glitters. _____________________
All that is to prepare us to meet the God of Exodus 16, who gets angry without good reason, or so it would seem. The people of Israel, many thousands of them, are making their way across the desert, and need—need a safe and reliable source of food and water. They cannot survive otherwise. Without it, they die. One chapter earlier, they came across a spring, but the water was undrinkable. They cried out to God about their situation, and the water became sweet and safe to drink. Then in today’s story, it’s a source of food they lack. The Passover lamb they ate the night of their escape from Egypt, had long ago been digested, and they were now famished and near starvation. They were having dreams (maybe hallucinations) of overflowing stew-pots back in Egypt. Slavery had an upside. At least there was food to eat. Now . . . wouldn’t an all-knowing and compassionate God be anticipating exactly that response, and exhibit some empathy for what they were experiencing? Well, we’re told Yahweh does send them quail that drop from the sky, and edible manna that settles on the earth like dew. But, the way these acts of God are described, we get the impression God was angry at them because they grumbled, and that God provided food only under duress, as if God was just caving into their petty demands. In fact, in the retelling of this story in the Book of Numbers, it’s clear that God was deeply offended by the complainers. So much so, that fire from heaven fell on some of them, and they were consumed. So it sounds like, at face value, these stories tell of a people who cry out to God because they lack basic necessities for life, and God semi-reluctantly, if not angrily, caves in to their demands and gives them what they need. So what kind of God is this? What if the people had not mentioned their dire straights? How long did God want them to wait meekly in the desert, dying for lack of food and water, before God sent relief? God could have rained down manna any time. Why didn’t God take the initiative to provide, before the situation got desperate? And why would God be angry at such a legitimate complaint? These are things I didn’t understand when I first heard the story in Sunday school in Florida. And I still have trouble with it today. _____________________
But . . . take heart! There are some glittering pieces of gold in this story. So let’s shake the pan a bit and have a look. I see in here a glimmer of God’s extravagant mercy, mercy undeserved by the recipient, as always, a gift. The gift of God’s presence in plenty or in want. In fact, the long story of how they got to this place— how an work-force of thousands of slaves could escape from Egypt— slaves on whose back Egypt built its economy— that’s a huge glimmer of God’s grace. God noticed their suffering, and worked out an elaborate plan not only to bring them out, but to have them leave with “good riddance,” and piles of valuable jewelry and marketable goods. That miraculous escape was fresh in their minds in today’s story. It happened only days or weeks earlier. Yet . . . many of them are longing to go back. But we sort of get that, don’t we? We still see that happen today, when someone newly freed, misses that shred of security and predictability they had when they were in an abusive relationship or lived in a country that oppressed them. Sometimes, people would rather go back into abuse or oppression, than face a frightening and uncertain future. So maybe God’s anger is easy to understand. Because we ourselves have known that kind of anger, after we go to great lengths to help someone find freedom from addiction, or from abuse, or some other oppression, and then we watch this person we care about so deeply, and have invested so much of our love and life, turn right around and go back into the arms of that which held them captive— choosing oppression over love and freedom. At the very least, God’s anger here in this story has less to do with people begging for food and drink, and more to do with people who God loves rejecting God’s generous gift of love, and wistfully yearning for the scant benefits of slavery. We see God here as a spurned lover, a lover who poured out all his love and longing and power, to carry out the greatest rescue operation in human history. And they want to go back. I guess some anger seems justified here after all. But I see another piece of glittering gold. The story of manna itself is rich with grace and Gospel. God offers the former Israelite slaves a new and gracious gift— it is called, “enough.” Enough. Something they don’t have much experience with. They knew all about having terribly little, as slaves. Or having a great surplus, as they left Egypt loaded down with riches and jewels. But what was this concept called . . . “enough”? Notice how the manna was dispensed, and I quote (vv. 16-18). They were told, “Everyone gather as much as you need— an omer for each person in your tent.” The Israelites did as they were told; some gathered much, some little. And when they measured it by the omer, the one who gathered much did not have too much, and the one who gathered little did not have too little. Everyone had gathered just as much as they needed. Now, the text is a little ambiguous, but to me, it sounds like getting manna wasn’t the only miracle. God performed a miracle of wealth redistribution as they scooped it up. If a young man with a big scoop and a strong back happened upon a spot with an extra heavy layer of manna, and an old woman with a small scoop, & arthritis, & poor eyesight, went out and found only a small amount of manna, when they both returned to their house, they both ended up with one omer per person. Not too much, not too little. Exactly enough. And the story gets better, later in chapter 16, right after the part we read, God comes through with another gift—Sabbath. One day a week they could rest from the manna harvest. The sixth day of gathering would yield a double amount, and it would keep for two days. If they didn’t prepare, and went out on the Sabbath anyway, there would be no manna. Furthermore, there would be no hoarding of manna. Any other day, if they picked extra, trying to stockpile it for the next day, it would be full of maggots in the morning. Except on the Sabbath, it would stay fresh, for exactly one extra day, no more. The gift of enough. The gift of Sabbath rest. These gifts came from the hand of a loving God— a God of Grace and Gospel. Pure gold! When the community lived as God intended, following God’s direction, basic needs were met. Some, who worked extra hard, ended up with less than their labor produced. And thus, persons less able to labor, still had enough. It’s a beautiful story, after all! It’s a Gospel word for us still today. _____________________
Life isn’t always fair. Some people work hard, and work well, and don’t see the fruit of their labors. Some people cannot, or do not, put in the time, and their needs still get met. God never struck a deal with the Israelites, or struck a deal with us, that we would always get what we deserved, what we worked for. Sometimes, work and results are out of balance. Reminds me of a song by one of my favorite singer-songwriters, Sarah Jarosz. She was at the Red Wing festival this summer. The song title is “Johnny.” Look it up sometime. It’s not a religious song, and I don’t know Sarah’s faith orientation, but her words speak Gospel truth. The refrain, which she repeats often, says, “You might not get what you pay for, you know that nothing’s for sure. An open heart looks a lot like the wilderness.” Our faith does not rest on God giving us what we pay for. Our faith rests on God being with us, in the wilderness. An open heart, as well as open hands, sometimes still leads to disappointment. I’m not saying anything we don’t already know, from experience. Our open hands are not always filled with what we expect, when we expect it. Our open heart may get wounded. But what we are promised by Yahweh, is that we won’t be left alone in the desert. The God who sets people free, will not abandon them to their freedom. God will stay with them, looking for open hands, looking for open hearts. What God wants from us while we’re in the wilderness . . . is openness. Openness. Not longing for old securities. Not turning toward Egypt, to go back to old captivities. Not hoarding the excess we unexpectedly end up with sometimes. No. Just . . . open hands, open heart. Yes, openness looks a lot like the wilderness, but these strange stories from the Hebrew scriptures reassure us— we aren’t the first ones in the desert to get a great gift— a God who is loving, who is full of grace, and who looks a lot like Jesus.
Join me, will you, in reading together, in response, the confession printed in the order of worship.
oneGod who Provides, God who sees and knows our need, we fail to rest, and trust in the God of enough. allForgive us, O God. Increase our trust. Open our hands. oneWhen our enough does not seem like enough, when we claw and grasp and compete, out of desperation, allForgive us, O God. Increase our trust. Open our hearts. oneWhen we forget your provisions in the past, and see only the emptiness facing us now, allForgive us, O God. Increase our trust. Open our eyes. oneWhen we descend into a spirit of entitlement, when we fear walking into the unknown, without everything already in hand, allForgive us, O God. Increase our trust. Open our lives. [silence] oneReceive the Good News. God the Provider is with us, and that is enough. We are forgiven. We are open. We are loved. —Phil Kniss, October 10, 2021
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