The Ninth Sunday after Pentecost-The Rev Melanie Lemburg
The Ninth Sunday after Pentecost-Proper 12A
July 30, 2023
I read a quote this week about Jesus’s
parables in this week’s gospel reading from the Episcopal priest Barbara Brown
Taylor that I want to share with you.
Here is what she writes, “The striking thing about all these images is
their essential hiddenness—the mustard seed hidden in the ground, the yeast
hidden in the dough, the treasure hidden in the field, the pearl hidden among
all the other pearls, the net hidden in the depths of the seas. If the kingdom is like these, then it is not
something readily apparent to the eye but something that must be searched for,
something just below the surface of things waiting there to be discovered and
claimed.”
I love this idea of the kingdom of God
lingering just below the surface of the things of our every-day life! (It’s actually the subject of a song by one
of my favorite artists Carrie Newcomer titled “Every little bit of it.”)
And interestingly enough, a few weeks
ago, before I even knew that this gospel reading was coming up, I started
journaling about moments in my own life when I encountered the kingdom of God,
and I wrote about these in standard parable form: “The kingdom of God is like a giant fig tree
whose owners invite you to come pick figs while they are on vacation. On the way over, you worry about how you will
reach the higher branches, and when you get there, you discovered they have
left ladders set up underneath to reach the figs on the higher limbs.”
Or from VBS week—“The kingdom of God is
like child-sized arms suddenly wrapping around your legs or waist when you are
distracted and busy. If you take time to
stop and look down, you see a face of joy and love shining up at your and in
that instant, you remember who you’ve been created to be.”
Or a random moment of domesticity: “The
kingdom of God is like when your teenage children can do something that you
can’t do, and they do it willingly and joyfully, and it contributes to the good
of the whole family.”
Or “The kingdom of God is like a healing
prayer circle made of kind hands and generous hearts and the surprise of the
Holy Spirit showing up in heat and light and happy light-headedness.”
We talked about this all at last week’s
healing service, and I invited them to write their own parables about when the
Kingdom of God has shown up in their lives.
Here are some of what they said.
The Kingdom of God is like feeding the
kids of VBS from the kitchen and then after all is cleaned up, going out to
watch them sing their songs with such joy and life.
The Kingdom of God is like when the
light breaks through one of the stained glass windows in the church (which are
easy to miss because they are up high), and the light shines in color on the
floor.
The Kingdom of God is moving to a new
condo and discovering that you have marvelous neighbors who become like your
family because we all need each other.
The Kingdom of God is like a trip that
you’ve worried about and prayed over that turns out being so much more
wonderful than you could have ever imagined.
The Kingdom of God is like my back yard
where so many different animals come to be fed:
aggressive racoons, slow moving turtles, three black crows, gentle deer,
bird-food eating squirrels, cats-both inside and out. It is a reminder of how God is revealed to us
in nature and through the peaceable animal kingdom.
The kingdom of God is like a grandparent
who will make you your very own cake when you didn’t get a slice of cake at
church coffee hour.
Isn’t it marvelous, this understanding
that the kingdom of God is all around us, just underneath the surface of things! Would you like to try it?
I’ll give you two or three minutes to
think about it and write down your Kingdom of God moment, and then, if you
want, we’ll also have some time for you to share it with someone sitting next
to you.
Here’s one final one to share with you:
The kingdom of God is like a congregation who eagerly writes your homily for
you when you’ve been away on vacation!
Comments
Post a Comment