The Fourth Sunday after the Epiphany-Rev Melanie Lemburg
Epiphany 4B_2021
January 31, 2020
Our reading from First Corinthians for
today plops us down right in the middle of a conflict that is happening in the
church in Corinth. First Corinthians is
chock full of ways that Paul is writing to try to quell conflict among this
particular group of followers of Jesus.
We’ve seen factions at work in this letter—Paul writes that he has
gotten reports from “Chloe’s people” of some serious conflicts in Corinthian
community.
In our passage for today, which seems to
be, at first glance, about food, Paul is
writing to the Corinthians about what it means to be a community of the
followers of Christ. He is writing about
how often we are called to make sacrifices on behalf of other members of the community,
sacrifices of our own preferences in order to shore up our fellow believers in
the church.
A couple of weeks ago, one of my
seminary classmates shared a reflection with us about what it means to be
community. It was an interesting take
for me, and I’ll share it with you and invite you to ponder it in light of our
church and our society right now.
This is an excerpt from the essay “Lost”
in the book Perseverance by Margaret Wheatley
“When
we are overwhelmed and confused, our brains barely function. We reach for the
old maps, the routine responses, what worked in the past.
If
we keep grasping for things to look familiar, if we frantically try and fit new
problems and situations into old ways of thinking, we will continue to wander
lost and eventually collapse from our confusion. There is no way to get out of
this wilderness except to acknowledge that we’re lost.
As
we relax enough to tune in, we’ll be able to notice the information and signals
that are everywhere around us. There’s sufficient information right here to
help us find our way out. But we have to be willing to stop, to listen, to
admit we don’t know.
To
navigate life today, we definitely need new maps. Our old ones confuse us
unendingly. These new maps are waiting for us. They’ll appear as soon as we
quiet down and, with other lost companions, relax into the unfamiliarity of
this new place, senses open, curious rather than afraid.
The
maps we need are in us, but not only one of us. If we read the currents and
signs together, we’ll find our way through.”
One
of my colleagues reflected on this that in a difficult time in her life,
another colleague told her that she had learned that sometimes when she was in
a rut or feeling especially lost, that she recognized that as a call from God
to “stop and make camp.”
After
I reflected on this passage, I was reminded of the story of the Children of
Israel in the wilderness and how they knew when it was time to stop and make
camp and stay still for a while and how they knew when it was time to move
on. (This is from Numbers 9:15-23.) The Lord would signal to the Israelites by
using a pillar of cloud. Whenever the pillar
of cloud would rest over the tabernacle-the tent of the covenant, then the Israelites
would know that it was time to make camp and stay there. And they would stay there as long as it took
until the pillar of cloud and fire would move from the tent of the
covenant. Sometimes the pillar of cloud
would rest for just a night and sometimes it would rest for several days. And the Israelites knew that they, too,
should rest in camp as long as the pillar of cloud was stationary.
I
find myself longing these days for such surety and such clear cut signs as Paul’s
certainty on what is right for the community in Corinth and for a pillar of
cloud to light our way during this difficult season, telling us when to gather
together and when not to, when to make camp and stay still and when to move
boldly forward.
Paul
writes to the Corinthians: “But take care that this liberty of yours does not
somehow become a stumbling block to the weak.”
He urges them to consider all members of the community and to give
special consideration to the weakest ones, that they may have the full support
of the community of faith to nurture them in their faith.
My
prayers and my wrestlings lately have been how to care for the weakest members
of our community; how to know when we are being called to sacrifice the devices
and desires of our own hearts on behalf of others in the community; and it has
been how to discern God’s call to us in this lost season. I don’t have any answers for any of this at
this point, but I invite you to join me in the ponderings, in considering when
we are being called by God to sacrifice and what might be gained in our
community through a season of stillness and rest and discernment and how to do
that work together?
“To
navigate life today, we definitely need new maps. Our old ones confuse us
unendingly. These new maps are waiting for us. They’ll appear as soon as we
quiet down and, with other lost companions, relax into the unfamiliarity of
this new place, senses open, curious rather than afraid.
The
maps we need are in us, but not only one of us. If we read the currents and
signs together, we’ll find our way through.”
Comments
Post a Comment