Andy James

wandering the web since 1997

Presbyterian minister in Atlanta.
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Found beer in seminary.

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Temptation for Today

February 17, 2013 By Andy James

a sermon on Luke 4:1-13 for the First Sunday in Lent
preached on February 17, 2013, at the First Presbyterian Church of Whitestone

It’s time again for Lent—that forty-day period when we are supposed to eat fish on Fridays, give up chocolate, alcohol, or Facebook, and generally reflect on how we are sinful and miserable human beings. As with so many things, we can blame it all on Jesus—he was the first, after all, to take a forty-day journey in the wilderness, and his story of temptation is clearly what Lent is all about, right? Since he suffered for forty days, we should too!

But I think our text from Luke this morning suggests that our Lenten journey should look a little different from Jesus’ sojourn in the wilderness. Jesus had just been baptized in the Jordan River, and he went to the wilderness led by the Spirit and yet to be tempted by the devil. His vision of temptation along the way was not of beef or chicken on Fridays, rich candy bars, wine and beer, or social networking sites—no, these temptations rattled at the core of his humanity.

First, after forty days without food, the devil suggested to the famished Jesus, “If you are the Son of God, command this stone to become a loaf of bread.” Jesus had spent his entire time in the wilderness fasting completely, eating nothing—far more than just giving up chocolate or limiting ourselves to fish on Fridays during Lent! Giving up things that aren’t all that good for us to begin with for the 40 days of Lent isn’t really what this is all about! Although the devil tried to take advantage of Jesus’ hunger, Jesus didn’t take the bait. “It is written, ‘One does not live by bread alone.’”

But for Jesus, this was about more than food, and so it should be for us. We are not what we eat—no, we can be better measured by what we consume from the world around us, by the people who influence us, by the natural resources we use and abuse, by the relationships that enrich our lives, and by the faith that sustains us as we go along the journey together. Jesus knew this, and so he somehow battled through his hunger to avoid this real temptation upon him to fill himself with something that would not truly satisfy him.

But the devil was not done with Jesus. He next took Jesus on a quick but complete tour of the kingdoms of the world and offered them to him: “I will give their glory and all this authority to you, for it has been given over to me, and I give it to anyone I please. If you, then, will worship me, it will all be yours.” Now Jesus had to be outraged right away—he surely knew that all the world belongs to God, and the devil had no authority whatsoever to give these kingdoms to anyone, especially Jesus, who already had such authority! But this temptation was about more than the power itself—this was about how to use and abuse that power, about shifting allegiance to a different way of thinking and working in the world and misusing the gifts of power in our lives. Jesus didn’t fall for the devil’s tricks, though. Again, he responded with words from scripture: “It is written, ‘Worship the Lord your God, and serve only him.’” Jesus would not give in so easily to the powers of evil in the world in order to gain some temporary power and glory, for his call was to challenge this evil and make it clear that the greatest power comes in weakness and the greatest glory from giving it all away.

While this temptation may not seem to be something of our world—surely the devil doesn’t dangle power and honor and glory before us all the time!—all too often we do look to take the easy way to power and glory. We look for the quickest path to achieve our goals, even if it means cutting some corners or hurting some people along the way. We are constantly tempted to bow to powers other than God to get what we want. And we even seek to build up honor and glory for ourselves, focusing on establishing ourselves and our ways and ideas with power and privilege rather than seeking to join in what God is doing around us.

But Jesus’ third temptation takes all this testing to a new level for Jesus and for us. The devil suggested that Jesus should throw himself down off the pinnacle of the temple and see what would happen. He even quoted a bit of the psalm that preceded our gospel reading this morning:

He will command his angels concerning you, to protect you…
On their hands they will bear you up,
so that you will not dash your foot against a stone.

As the devil saw it, if these promises are so real and good and important, if God really is present, Jesus should have checked out it just to be sure, and all would be well. But Jesus knew otherwise. He too could quote the words of Psalm 91, but he didn’t need to test them at that moment in order to trust them. As Bruce Benson puts it in a brief reflection on this temptation (from the February 21, 2010, edition of Sing for Joy), Jesus was tempted more than anything “to forget that trusting God with one’s life is not the same thing as being reckless with one’s life, that throwing himself off a high wall would be an act of foolishness and not of faith.” And so Jesus responded to this temptation to misuse scripture with another quote from scripture: “It is said, ‘Do not put the Lord your God to the test.’”

Now we surely don’t put God to the test! We surely don’t make little deals with God that if only such-and-so will happen, we will be more faithful or stop doing something we shouldn’t be doing anyway. We surely don’t ask God to prove God’s goodness before trusting God in our lives. We surely don’t get frustrated and angry when God doesn’t answer our prayers as we wish and so fails our test. But you know it is true—so often we do exactly this. We expect God to respond to our prayers on our timetable. We suggest that the bad things that happen in our world or in our lives are simply part of “God’s plan” and so will just be okay if we can only suffer through the immediate pain and move on in life. And we even try to “prove” what we believe by twisting around events around us instead of trusting that God is really at work beyond our knowledge and comprehension.

The level of faith and confidence in God’s presence that Jesus demonstrated in response to this temptation—and all these temptations—is something that will constantly evade us. Unlike Jesus, we will always fall short in responding to the real temptations around us. We will never be sustained completely by the right things, and we will always be hungry for something more. We will never be able to completely give up our thirst for power and trust that God’s power is enough for us. And we will always be looking for better proof that God is at work in our lives and our world.

Yet Jesus struggled with these same things. These temptations during those forty days in the wilderness and countless other times during Jesus’ life remind us that God knows the depth of the trials and temptations that we face. And just as he overcame those temptations, we can find a new and different way through them, slowly but surely, day by day, not because we become better people but because God’s new life in Jesus Christ takes deeper and fuller root in us and in our world each and every day. Lent is the gift of time to do just that—to clean out our closets of the dusty old things that get in the way of all that can be new, to cultivate new practices that help us to set aside faith in our own ways and instead trust God’s grace, to make our way through the temptations of our world trusting the presence of God all along the way.

So may we find God amidst all that we give up and all that we take up in these Lenten days so that we can walk the road of uncertainty and temptation with confidence as we seek the way to new life along the road of the cross and look for the hope of the resurrection in our midst through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

Filed Under: posts, sermons Tagged With: Jesus, Lent, Luke 4.1-13, Satan, temptation, testing God

Glimpses of Glory

February 10, 2013 By Andy James

a sermon on Luke 9:28-36 for Transfiguration
preached on February 10, 2013, at the First Presbyterian Church of Whitestone

Please raise your hand (or write in the comments!) if you have used the word “transfiguration” at all outside the church in the last year. I didn’t think there would be many of you! Transfiguration is one of those very “churchy” words that just don’t mean much unless you’re well-connected to the life of the church. This strange day, Transfiguration, that comes up every year on the Sunday before Lent points us to a story told in all three of the synoptic gospels, where Jesus and several of his disciples go up on a mountain for an incredible spiritual encounter as Jesus meets up with Moses and Elijah and his face and clothes shine brightly.

Transfiguration is just not something we encounter every day. We just don’t see faces and clothes shining brightly or things almost magically changing before our very eyes. This is the stuff of fairy tales, not of real life. Now I think we actually have seen some transfiguration around us over the past couple days as our landscape took on a new and glorious brightness as things shifted from the general winter grays on Thursday to the dreariness of rain and snow on Friday and finally to the beauty and wonder of a bright snowy landscape yesterday and today. But we all know that this glory is only temporary. Already the snow is a little dirty and gray, and by Tuesday much of what is left will be nearly black, leaving us to wish for spring all the more.

The Transfiguration of Jesus parallels these patterns of  snow quite well, I think—it gives us a beautiful glimpse of glory before we are forced back into the mundane of the everyday even as we long for something more. The story gets at so many of the recurring images that we have of Jesus and the disciples. Here we see the strange human person of Jesus who suddenly has divine power and presence. We see a connection to the life and history of the people of Israel as Moses and Elijah appear. We see three disciples along for the ride who want to “get it” so badly that they completely miss the point of what is happening. And we even hear another mysterious voice from the cloud reminding everyone of who this Jesus is.

The story is simple but compelling. Luke tells us that Jesus took three of his disciples up on the mountain with him to pray. Suddenly, as he was praying, his appearance changed. His face looked different, and his clothes turned a dazzling white. If all that wasn’t enough, two other figures appeared on the mountaintop and started talking to Jesus. They were talking about his departure and his journey to Jerusalem, and it soon became clear to the disciples that it was Moses and Elijah with him. Peter, James, and John were very tired, but somehow they stayed awake to witness all of this. As the conversation came to an end and Moses and Elijah were leaving, Peter stopped them and suggested that they should find a way to extend this moment. He even was willing to make it happen—he’d build three dwellings so that they could all stay as long as they wanted! But then a cloud appeared around them, and a voice spoke up:  “This is my son, my Chosen; listen to him!” After the voice, Moses and Elijah were gone, and the disciples were alone with Jesus. When they went down from the mountain, they were speechless as they waited for what was next.

Like so many of the stories of Jesus’ power and glory from the gospels, I for one am left somewhat empty afterwards, wondering what all this means. We can pretty easily sort out what Jesus teachings mean even if we have to reinterpret them for today, and the crucifixion and resurrection stories have centuries of interpretation that give them an important role in our life of faith. We can even assign some meaning pretty easily to moments of transition in Jesus’ life, like his birth or his baptism.

But wonders and signs are much more difficult. Jesus’ miracles, for one, don’t always make sense to our ears that normally hear of the wonders of modern medicine. And while when Jesus casts out demons I recognize that there is some great power being shown in the person of Jesus, but I wonder what we ought to do today when we don’t recognize demonic activity in the same way or share this same power. And the Transfiguration leaves me scratching my head and wondering what this story might possibly inspire for us today. It doesn’t seem to be much more than a wonderful moment when we can discover the mystery of God’s presence among us.

Just as a snowstorm doesn’t carry a lot of meaning in our lives unless the effects go on for weeks or months, the Transfiguration too seems like a relatively forgettable moment in the life of Jesus, just another moment when we see Jesus’ power and glory revealed— and the disciples continuing their usual bungling and fumbling that seems to show up whenever they are faced with the reality of who Jesus is. To most people outside the church, people who see the Bible as a book of stories and not an authority on faith and life, people who are even more confused than I am about Jesus’ miracles and healings and casting out of demons, stories like the Transfiguration are mythical at best and just plain crazy at worst.

But there is something more going on here for us. Even if we don’t fully understand this strange moment, this glimpse of the glory of Jesus can help us to see him more clearly in his time and in ours. Everything that Jesus has done up to this point in Luke’s gospel—the preaching, teaching, and healing that has marked his ministry around Galilee—looks different now that Jesus has shone with this strange glorious light. He is not just a faith healer or an inspired teacher—he is one who has standing and status that comes from beyond himself and is more fully revealed little by little, with each new encounter.

But this glimpse of Jesus’ glory doesn’t just end here on the mountaintop. As his life and ministry continues, Jesus keeps showing his strange and wonderful way to everyone he meets. In his death, it is opened anew once again as we see  that even God’s holiness is open to the depths of human pain, suffering, and sin. And most of all, in the resurrection, we see the greatest exposition of this glory as we learn that God’s power and glory extend over anything and everything—even death.

But the real gift of the glory of God revealed in Jesus’ Transfiguration atop that mountain comes as it shows up in our own time. There are countless ways to get a glimpse of this glory in our world. We can see it around us in the wonder of nature, in the beauty of a morning snowfall, in the joy of children, in so many things in our lives. But these glimpses of glory are exactly that: glimpses. They do not show us the full wonder, power, and love of God in our midst. We can’t see everything that we need to know about God just from opening our eyes to see a beautiful snowfall or vista or even by experiencing the wonder of relationship with our fellow human beings.

Yet when we gather as the community of faith, we get a deeper glimpse of that glory than we can have on our own. When we gather as the people of God, our united vision helps us to see things that we might have missed on our own. When we sing songs of praise or offer words of prayer and thanksgiving, we get a closer look at the new world that we also glimpse in the Transfiguration. When we come together to fight for justice, to intervene in the pervasive yet quiet hunger in our community, to step up and say that the poor will not be forgotten anymore, we start shining the glory of God out into our world all the more. And when we gather at this table, we gain not only a glimpse of the glory of the resurrected Christ but also some food for the journey so that we might live out this glory all the more.

So today, as we remember this great glimpse of glory on the mountaintop, as we gather here at this table hoping for our own glimpse of Jesus’ wonder and love, may we glimpse the full glory of God in Jesus Christ in our worship and our sharing so that we might go forth to shine his glory out into our world brighter than even a sunny post-snow day throughout these wintery, Lenten days and beyond until we shine brightly in the glory of Jesus Christ our Lord.

Lord, come quickly! Amen.

Filed Under: posts, sermons Tagged With: church, Luke 9.28-36, Transfiguration

Love: The Way of Life

February 3, 2013 By Andy James

a sermon on 1 Corinthians 13:1-13 for the Fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time
preached on February 3, 2013, at the First Presbyterian Church of Whitestone

No, you have not stumbled into a wedding this morning, but you wouldn’t know that from our scripture reading this morning! As a pastor, I’ve been a part of seven weddings, and four of them included some portion of these words from First Corinthians—and I think that is actually well below average! These beautiful words from Paul’s first letter to the church in Corinth have become common descriptions of the kind of love that two people wish to share with each other in married life, but they actually come out of a very different context.

That original church in Corinth, you see, was more like a nasty and angry divorce court than a love-filled wedding day! They knew how to fight with each other very well and divided themselves on nearly every imaginable line. The rich people refused to sit with the poor people. Those of Jewish background refused to eat dinner with those who had been Gentiles. Members of the church took their disputes with one another to the civil courts rather than dealing with them among the people of the church. And some people tried to claim that their spiritual gifts were better than everyone else’s—and so they took advantage of the whole community in the process. In short, it was a huge mess—but into this mess Paul spoke these beautiful words about love.

These thirteen verses of the thirteen chapter of 1 Corinthians divide neatly into three parts that lift up the centrality of love, the definition of love, and the endurance of love. First, Paul suggests that love has to be a part of anything and everything that we do in the church. All the different spiritual gifts that come to us mean nothing unless they exhibit love in the end. Speaking in tongues, offering prophetic words, opening the mysteries of life, having faith, even giving up all our possessions—all these wonderful gifts actually gain their meaning only when they are accompanied by love. Without love, they are just empty acts, but with love, they take on new and deeper meaning to be enactments of something more.

But what is this something more? What is love anyway? There are plenty of ways to think about love in the world—one thesaurus suggests six different possible uses for the noun and two for the verb, and this doesn’t even count when “love” is used in tennis to note a score of zero! In the Greek of the New Testament, there are even four different words that get translated to our single English word “love.” So for his second point about love, Paul offers a definition of what it means for the life of faith. This love is not about sexual attraction, life with a spouse, or even familial bonds. No—according to Paul, love is a way of life. His beautiful words in our reading say it so well, I think:

Love is patient;
love is kind;
love is not envious or boastful or arrogant or rude.

It does not insist on its own way;
it is not irritable or resentful;
it does not rejoice in wrongdoing, but rejoices in the truth.

It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.

This way of life demands something more than just a basic attraction or even a lifelong commitment. At its core, it honors the inherent goodness and beauty of all members of a community and recognizes the importance of staying in relationship even when stress and strain would make it seem better to act otherwise. This way of life doesn’t seek something good for the one trying to live it but instead emphasizes the well-being and needs of others. And this way of life can handle anything that comes its way, for it is resilient, hopeful, joyful, and enduring, since it comes not from within any human being but from God.

Finally, Paul insists that love will never end. This is natural for something that finds its beginning in God, but it is no less important to remember. Plenty of other things will come to an end. So much of who we are and what we do will be different when it is completed. We grow up and change in time, and we will see differently, act differently, and live differently than we do now at some point. But love will stick around—in fact, it will only grow deeper. Because love never ends, we can always learn more about it. We can always sort out more ways for love to sink into our lives and our everyday living. And because love never ends, we can trust that we should put all our energy and effort into pursuing this way of life each and every day.

When we live out love, you see, we do our best to emulate and imitate God, for the ultimate exposition of love in the world is from God. One of the most ancient songs of the church is a beautiful and simple phrase in Latin:

Ubi caritas et amor, deus ibi est.
Where charity and love are, God is there.

These words remind us of this so well, even though Paul never explicitly mentions God in this text. I can’t even begin to imagine how we might ever live out this love in our lives with others if we didn’t have it first from God.

When we live out this love, when we take on this way of life that has the good of others at heart, we mirror what we have seen as we have walked with God. We embody God’s way of love with us as we live with one another, when we show care and concern for the fullness of life, when we prioritize relationships over rules and regulations, when we emphasize grace, mercy, and kindness even as we lift up what has gone wrong, and when we embody healthy enduring love as our human relationships come to natural ends. We embody God’s way of love with us as we love ourselves, when we remember that we are beloved children of God even when we don’t necessarily see it, when we have patience with ourselves when we go wrong, and when we challenge ourselves to always pursue this more excellent way of love. And we embody God’s way of love with us as we reach out into the world, when we offer words of comfort and consolation and challenge, not condemnation, when we share with others simply because we love them, not for any benefit of our own, and when we place the gift of love at the center of everything that we do.

Thankfully I don’t think we here at the First Presbyterian Church of Whitestone face anything like the situation in Corinth that brought Paul to write these words. I don’t say much about love because I think we have a pretty good grasp on it. We do not sit ready to attack each other with our words or actions, nor do we let ourselves be driven apart by our different backgrounds and ways of life. Even when we disagree with one another, we do so with great respect and care and concern. But today it feels right to be reminded of these words, to remember why we live together as we do, to recenter our life together in this way of love as we place our trust in God’s love and wonder where the days ahead will lead us.

And ultimately we witness and embody this love at its greatest at this table, at this place where Paul called out the Corinthians the most for their bickering and fighting and denying hospitality, at this gathering where we come together with the saints of all the ages—even those from Corinth!—to share a meal with Jesus himself as host. You see, it is at this great feast where we see love in its fullest form—love that is not afraid to face death, love that triumphs over even the worst death has to offer, love that ultimately will join all creation in an unending song of praise, gathered at a feast of love for all the ages.

So today and always, may this love—love that is patient and kind, not envious or boastful or arrogant or rude; love that bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things—may this love sustain us for our journey, guide our work and life with one another, and inspire us for our life in the world, today and always. Amen.

Filed Under: posts, sermons Tagged With: 1 Cor 13, love

The Past, Present, and Future Word

January 27, 2013 By Andy James

a sermon on Nehemiah 8:1-3, 5-6, 8-10 for the Third Sunday in Ordinary Time
preached on January 27, 2013, at the First Presbyterian Church of Whitestone

I started off my holiday Monday this week as I suspect many of you did, settling in front of the TV for a bit to watch the second—or fourth, depending on how you count it!—inauguration of President Barack Obama. I try very hard not to inject my politics into this pulpit—though over a cup of coffee, a meal, or a beer I am quite willing to tell you who I vote for and why I do it!—but I will say that I have been a fan of President Obama since he first appeared on the national scene at the 2004 Democratic Convention, back when he was a state senator from Illinois who was running for the US Senate. Still, I believe that the inauguration is not so much a political moment as a national one, a time when we come together to be surprised yet again by our strange ability to transfer the most powerful office in the world peacefully from one person to another.

In this second inaugural address, I most appreciated how President Obama connected his goals for his second term to the founding principles of our nation. He quoted the Declaration of Independence

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

Then he made our challenge clear:

Today we continue a never-ending journey to bridge the meaning of those words with the realities of our time.

Over and over again in his speech, he linked these principles of the past with the realities of the present:

We have always understood that when times change, so must we; that fidelity to our founding principles requires new responses to new challenges; that preserving our individual freedoms ultimately requires collective action.

While we all may disagree on exactly which actions are required to make these past ideals reality in the present and future, this challenge to connect who we have been with who we are now is our great call in this changing age.

This is the same challenge addressed in our reading from Nehemiah today. Nehemiah was governor of Judah in a time when the people had just returned from exile in Babylon and were seeking to rebuild Jerusalem and reestablish their common life and identity. Today’s reading tells of an early gathering of the people as they prepared to rebuild Jerusalem. In the face of uncertain days, they gathered to hear the Torah, the books of the law, read by the priest and scribe Ezra so that they might be reconnected to their past and sort out how they ought to live in the present and future. They listened intently as Ezra read from early morning until midday. Along the way, other priests and scribes—whose difficult-to-pronounce names fill the verses of our reading that we skipped!—helped the people to understand the law, offering interpretation of what was being read and helping them to see what these words—several hundred years old even then!—might mean for them.

The people of Judah couldn’t just listen to the old words and immediately act as their ancestors had— they needed guidance and wisdom to figure out how the old things applied to those new days. As commentator Kathleen O’Connor puts it

To rebuild their faith and their cultural life requires recovery of their pre-Babylonian worldview, yet they must reimagine it for the new situation, because their history has undermined their faith. (Feasting on the Word, Year C, Volume 1, p. 267)

The ancient words were still there, still offering deep wisdom and hope, but without some sort of interpretation, they would mean mean nothing. Again, Kathleen O’Connor puts it beautifully:

This reading about the reading of [the law] does not inflict the rigid orthodoxy of the past on the gathered people but urges them to meet God anew in the changing times in which they find themselves. (p. 271)

Just as Ezra and Nehemiah gathered the people to hear the ancient scripture and interpret it anew for their time, just as our president challenged our nation at the beginning of his second term to hear anew our core values and sort out what they should look like for us today, so I believe that we in the church are invited to do this same thing, to sort out how we are to understand the Bible in our own day and how to live out our faith in the midst of our own changing times.

Even though God is always faithful and does not change, as our last hymn reminded us, sometimes we must change. Just as the people of Judah heard the word and interpreted it anew for their world after exile, so we may have to live out the Bible differently now than we did fifty or one hundred or 141 years ago. Just as our nation is challenged to make its founding principles applicable to new and different days, so we may have to find new pathways for our church in a changing world.

And so today as we journey into our annual meeting of this congregation, I think we are called to remember these ancient moments of reinterpretation and sort out how we might do the same thing—how we are to listen for what God is calling us to do in this time and this place, and respond in faith, hope, and love as we journey together along the way. We are called to consider real change in this place, not just a willingness to wait long enough for things to change, to hope and pray that we will magically return to what we once thought we were, or even to pray fervently yet simply that God will act in our midst. In these days, we need real and concrete action by us for a new and different way of embodying God’s presence in this congregation and for this community. I don’t have clear guidance for what we must do differently or what must change in order for us to survive and thrive again as a congregation, but I do know that simply doing what we have done before and expecting different results is a recipe for failure.

Now our congregational meeting today is only the beginning of this process. We will certainly hear reports and consider a few small actions like electing new leaders for the coming years in our midst, but there is little else that we can do today. Instead, the real work comes in the everyday life of this congregation and our world, the places where the rubber meets the road, the moments when we sort out how what actions we will take in response to God’s Word and the situation of our world. Toward that end, you’ll hear more in the meeting today about a discernment and conversation process over the next few months that I and the session hope will help us to see where we are and where we are going. I hope that you will make a commitment to participate in this process, to add your voice to those who long for something new to take hold in this place, to step up and take action to be a part of God doing something new in and through this First Presbyterian Church of Whitestone. We need your presence, your voices, your commitment, and your action in the days ahead, for just as the people of Judah did not live out the words of the law on their own, just as President Obama cannot fix what ails our nation on his own so we too gather in community to sort out what God is calling us to do, to hear the Spirit speaking in our midst again and again, and to be restored and made new for the joy of the days ahead.

So may God’s presence be among us as we gather, God’s Word be loud and clear and understandable in our ears, and God’s new creation be our goal as we live and work together for the days ahead. Lord, come quickly! Amen.

Filed Under: posts, sermons Tagged With: Barack Obama, discernment, inauguration, Nehemiah 8, reinterpretation

Radical Hospitality, Extravagant Grace

January 20, 2013 By Andy James

a sermon on John 2:1-11 for the Second Sunday of Ordinary Time
preached on January 20, 2013, at the First Presbyterian Church of Whitestone

Over my seven and a half years in Whitestone, I have developed some habits and routines. Some of them have changed since I moved out of the manse last year, but others remain constant.

Saturday night is the most routine part of my routine. Because I have to work on Sunday morning and be at my best, I very rarely make plans to go out to a concert or show or even to visit with friends, and if I do, I’m almost always home by 9:00! So I have a standing dinner date with myself at the same restaurant every week, where I sit at the bar and enjoy a quiet dinner as the world speeds by all around me. I’ve been doing this for four or five years now, and I am definitely a regular in every sense of the word—all the staff there know me by name and make sure that I am taken care of!

About a year after I started this routine, I noticed a strange thing happening. One night, the glass of water that appeared upon my arrival turned into wine! Not actually the same glass, of course, but wine also appeared alongside the water! Was it a Saturday night miracle? Or was it just a turn of hospitality? Or maybe a bit of both?

Today’s gospel reading from John recounts Jesus’ first miracle, a wedding night miracle with a turn of hospitality that tells us a lot about who Jesus is and how he approaches his life and ministry. This wedding must have been a big deal—Jesus and his disciples and his mother were all there. But apparently this wedding wasn’t a big enough deal for the host to keep extra wine on hand, and they ran out. When Jesus’ mother got wind of it, she went to Jesus and told him about it. I’m not quite sure why she went to him with this news, much as I have sometimes wondered why my own mother tells me some things, and I don’t think Jesus got it, either. Confused, he asked her directly, “What concern is that to you and me?”

Jesus didn’t want anything to do with the situation, but his mother clearly thought he could step in and make a difference. He disagreed. “My hour has not yet come,” he proclaimed. It was not yet time for him to perform a miracle and make his real identity known. While the party may have needed more wine, Jesus needed more time. Still, Jesus’ mother would not take no for an answer. Without even responding to Jesus, she went to the servants and told them to follow Jesus’ instructions.

So Jesus, probably still mumbling under his breath about his overbearing mother, got involved in the crisis at the wedding. He told the servants to fill some water jugs that would have normally been used for ritual washings, but they were empty by this time of the night. After they had been filled, Jesus told the servants to draw some water out of them and take it to the chief steward. The steward was very impressed with this new wine, so he called the groom over to tell him of his surprise, for most hosts serve the good wine first and save the worst for last, but in an act of strange and wonderful hospitality he seemed to have saved the best wine for the end of the party. Little did either of them know that one of the guests had saved the day through a little nudging from his mother, pulling off both a miracle and a radical turn of hospitality.

I think this miracle is a fitting beginning for John’s gospel—or for any story of the life and ministry of Jesus. First, this story shows us a Jesus who is humble and reluctant to use his powers when the time is not right. He does not seek to show off his miraculous abilities but rather wants and needs to wait until the time is right. His goal is not for people to believe in him—although his disciples certainly do—but instead to fulfill God’s purposes all along the way. He is afraid that if he acts too soon or in the wrong way, he might not be able to live out God’s intentions, so he keeps quiet about what he can do until he believes that the time is right.

This story also shows us a Jesus who can do amazing things with something that everyone else just assumed was getting in the way. Those huge empty pots seemed to be useless until Jesus got hold of them, but somehow something incredible happened when they were filled again. Not only was there suddenly more wine—it was better than what they had had before! Jesus makes this a pattern throughout his life and ministry, constantly pushing the people around him to reimagine what they can do with their lives and moving beyond expectations to do new things with the gifts that God has given us.

And most of all, it is fitting that John begins his story of Jesus’ life and ministry with a sign that ultimately points to radical hospitality and unlimited grace. Jesus overturns the cultural expectation—and common-sense determination!—that you start with the best wine and move toward the worst, thinking that the guests will be drunk enough not to notice the bad wine at the end of the party. But when Jesus’ act brings new wine that is better at the end of the party, he suggests that hospitality really matters, that even when something might not be understood or appreciated it should still be given, that everything we do to make people feel welcome is a part of showing God’s love. And this seemingly simple act shows us that Jesus will be working to express this new and different and radical way of living in all that he says and does, that he will not be afraid to welcome all people or to do things that seem strange or uncertain if they ultimately show God’s love and care for all people.

In the end, Jesus’ reluctance to perform this miracle, his ability to transform even the emptiest of barrels, and his radical hospitality help us to see a glimpse of everything that he will be up to in his ministry even as it is just beginning. This is an incredible challenge for us. We can’t turn water into wine—unless you happen to own or operate a restaurant where you want to care for your regular customers! Even so, this story challenges us to look for other ways that we can embody God’s radical hospitality and unlimited grace.

After Hurricane Sandy, Stony Point Center did just this. While there was little or no damage at the Center itself, hundreds of people who lived in nearby low-lying areas along the Hudson River found their homes flooded or washed away. Most of these people didn’t have a lot to begin with, and many were immigrants who do not speak English or who lack proper documentation. After the storm, many of these people started showing up at the Center looking for a place to stay. No one was turned away because of inability to pay or any other reason, and word of this open-door policy spread quickly among those whose homes were damaged or destroyed by the storm.

This was an amazing moment of hospitality for everyone. The Center had a number of empty beds because of cancellations related to the storm, so they had plenty of space to offer. They became certified by FEMA as official disaster housing, so the government paid for many of these guests, and other donations to disaster relief through Presbyterian Disaster Assistance helped cover additional expenses. And the people who made their way to the Center had found quite possibly the best place they could. Not only did they have a bed and meals for as long as they needed it, the Center staff’s ability to speak Spanish and experience working in immigrant communities helped make connections to other social support systems that would have been far more difficult to find otherwise. Simply by doing what seemed right and opening their doors to everyone in need, Stony Point Center became a place of refuge for those in greatest need and embodied the same radical hospitality and extravagant grace that Jesus showed at the wedding at Cana and throughout his ministry.

So maybe we don’t have any empty jugs laying around, maybe we don’t have storm victims waiting on our doorstep wondering if they can have a place to stay, and maybe we can’t even turn one man’s glass of water at dinner into wine without him asking for it, but maybe we can offer others even a little glimpse of the depth and breadth of God’s hospitality for us so that we might extend that welcome to everyone through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Amen.

Filed Under: posts, sermons Tagged With: Hurricane Sandy, John 2.1-11, Stony Point Center, water into wine, wedding at Cana

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