The 13th Sunday after Pentecost-the Rev Melanie Lemburg
13th
Sunday after Pentecost-Proper 16B
August 22, 2021
This past week, I read a post on social media from a friend from high school. This woman, who is now a wife, a mother, and a judge, was sharing with her Facebook friends that her mother was in the ICU with non-Covid pneumonia. This family has had some tragic occurrences in the past decade, including the death by suicide of my friend’s father. I was intrigued by my friend’s post, so I’ll just read it to you:
“I was taught a long time ago that all
of us have a direct line to Jesus. None of us have more access than another. We
can all go straight to the source.
However,
as I've gotten older, I've recognized that there are certain people who walk
among us who seem to have a sensitivity to the spiritual world that is
extraordinary. Maybe they listen better and are willing to hear more, so they
know more, feel more, and are just more in tune.
A
friend of an aunt of mine is one of those people. When our family has a big
prayer request, we send that request to her friend that I will just call
"S." I've never met her, but I feel like I know her. I sure know her
heart. I think her spirit must be one of the most beautiful on Earth….
I
know many of you know my mama has pneumonia (non-Covid) and is in the hospital.
She's been there for a week today. None of us have put it on Facebook, but most
[everybody in our small town] knows she's there and it isn't a secret. She is a
private woman, and I respect her privacy, but I also believe that when you are
given a message by a woman who listens to and hears Jesus via the Holy
Spirit---you don't just keep that to yourself.
So,
I'm not.
S
told us to pray, ‘Lord, turn it around.’
I've
been praying it over and over and over today. I've prayed it for my mama, and
I'd sure appreciate it if you would pray it for my mama, too.
But
S may hear more than she even knows she hears.
Covid.
"Lord,
turn it around."
Afghanistan
and national security.
"Lord,
turn it around."
The
grief everywhere you look.
"Lord,
turn it around."
The
division that only gets deeper and wider.
"Lord,
turn it around."
I
believe S is a woman who is willing to listen and hear more than the average
person. I know I don't need her to give me a prayer to pray for my mama for it
to be some kind of magic.
I
also know that those who listen and hear get specific messages the rest of us
may miss.
So
I'm humbly asking, if you are a pray-er, you consider praying the four simple
words: "Lord, turn it around."
And
when you watch something in your world turn, will you post it? Your turn may be
little to us but big to you. It may be big to every last one of us.
It
may make a huge difference to many, all over, no matter his or her belief or
faith. It may give someone out there hope.
And
we ALL need a big, fat dose of hope.
Lord,
turn it around.
Please.”
Our Old Testament reading for today
takes place just as Joshua is about to lead the Israelites into the promised
land. Joshua recounts all the ways that
Yahweh has saved the Israelites, and he urges them to renew the covenant that
Yahweh made with them in the wilderness. As a part of that renewal, they will be
pledging to turn solely toward Yahweh and to turn away from and renounce any of
the gods of the land they are entering.
“Choose this day whom you will serve…as
for me and my house we will serve the Lord,” Joshua urges them.
It has been interesting for me to think
about how when we choose or turn toward something, we are inevitably turning
away from something else. In this
instance the people are choosing Yahweh and turning away from all other gods. But if we think about it, there are so many
times in our lives that mean that when we choose one path, we are turning away
from something else. I think of all the
times I have chosen work and turned away from family. Times I have chosen my self and turned away
from the other; chosen easy answers over mystery and uncertainty when it comes
to my relationship with God. Times when
I have chosen any and everything else and turned away from God and the way
Jesus taught me how to be in this life.
So as tempting as it is for me to pray
my friend’s prayer, “Lord, turn it around” (and I certainly have been praying
that for her mother Judy), I realize that the choices we each make and that we
have all made together are what determine where we find ourselves now. So I can pray, “Lord, turn it around.” But I also need to pray, “Lord, turn us
around. Lord, turn me around.”
Because the nature of this human life
and the nature of what we refer to as sin, is that most of us have never been
able to consistently choose God, to consistently turn to God and away from the forces that destroy us. We see it in this story from Ancient
Israel. We see it in the disciples who
leave Jesus when his questions become too difficult. We see it everywhere in the world around us
today.
So this week, I invite you to pray for my friend’s mom who’s name is Judy. Pray that God will turn her pneumonia around. And I also invite you to join me in praying: “Lord, turn it around. Lord, turn us around. Lord, turn me around.”
Covid.
"Lord,
turn it around. Lord, turn us around. Lord, turn me around.”
Afghanistan
and national security.
"Lord,
turn it around. Turn us around. Turn me
around.”
Haiti
"Lord,
turn it around. Turn us around. Turn me
around.”
The
grief everywhere you look.
"Lord,
turn it around. Turn us around. Turn me around.”
The
division that only gets deeper and wider.
“Lord, turn it around. Lord, turn us around. Lord, turn me around. And lead us back to you.” Amen.
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