Homily: Yr B Proper 17, July 22, 2012, St. Albans
Readings: 2 Sam 7:1-14a; Ps 89:20-37; Ephesians
2:11-22; Mk 6:30-34, 53-56
Rest (Connecting What with Why)
Sometimes when I’m looking
over the Scripture readings for the coming Sunday there’s a verse that just
kind of leaps out and grabs me. This
week was one of those weeks. And the
verse that did it was this one:
Jesus said to them: “Come away to a deserted place all by
yourselves and rest a while.”
If you recall, Jesus had
sent the apostles out in pairs to travel through the countryside of Galilee,
healing and teaching and proclaiming God’s kingdom wherever people would
receive them. They’d gone out with no
cash, no food, and no change of clothes.
They’d traveled dusty roads, they’d slept in the streets, they’d missed
meals. They’d healed the sick, they’d
taught crowds. And now they were back,
probably exhausted by what appears to have been a successful mission.
And the first thing that Jesus
says to them when he sees them is this: “Come
away to a deserted place all by yourselves and rest a while.”
The Heart and Stroke
foundation released a survey a few months ago that found that an overwhelming
majority of Canadians are choosing to not eat a healthy diet and avoid regular
exercise because they are too busy.
Another survey just this
past week done by UCLA looked at American families and concluded that the
typical American family is so consumed with working, buying stuff, self
improvement and generally “getting ahead” that they actually spend very little
time together enjoying the things that they’re supposedly working for.
I’ve found that when I ask
people about their lives, the most frequent response I get is “I’ve been really
busy.” Sometimes it’s said almost as if it’s a badge
of honour. And I’m as guilty as anyone
else.
Do you think that when Jesus
spoke to his apostles, he might just as well have been talking to us?
“Come away to a deserted
place all by yourselves and rest awhile”
Many of us live busy lives,
hectic lives, over-scheduled lives. We
need to rest. We need to rest for the
obvious reasons, because we become physically and mentally tired. Sometimes we even burn-out. But I think there’s more to it than that.
We need to rest because if
we don’t, then all those things that keep us busy, all the work we do, all the
events we schedule, all the things we worry about, all of what we do can
become disconnected from why we’re doing it. Without rest, the what becomes disconnected
from the why.
I think Jesus knew this. Jesus was after all a busy guy. He was
someone with a strong sense of vocation, with a keen awareness of his
mission. He was in demand, he was
swarmed by crowds, sometimes he didn’t even have time to eat or drink. But we’re told over and over again in the
gospels that Jesus made a point of withdrawing from the crowds, and of going to
a deserted place, to rest and to pray.
To spend time with God.
Because these moments of
rest that we need, these “Sabbath” moments, are certainly meant to refresh and
renew us, to restore our energy and our health.
But they are also meant to provide us with the opportunity to reconnect
with God, to pray, to give thanks, to unload in God’s presence. To recover our sense of purpose and
priorities, of values and vocation. To re-connect
the what of our lives to the why.
We used to call this Sabbath,
this idea that we need to have times of intentional rest. The Sabbath was one of God’s gifts to
humanity. The teaching on the Sabbath
was one of what we now call the ten commandments: “Remember the sabbath day and keep it
holy. Six days you shall labour, but the
seventh day you shall not do any work”
But we’ve forgotten that the
sabbath is much more of a gift than a commandment. For the most part we simply ignore it, but if
we do think about it at all, we think about it as an obligation, as another
rule that we have to follow, another thing that we have to do like going to
church.
But do you remember who
Moses was talking to when he gave them this teaching? He was talking to a bunch of slaves, slaves
who had been forced to work harder and harder and longer and longer by the
Egyptian Pharoahs. This commandment to
rest one day a week wouldn’t have been heard by those slaves as an obligation. It would have been heard as something too good
to be true, a gift beyond their wildest imaginations. We get to rest? There’s a day when no one is going to make us
work? Praise God! would have been their
instant reaction.
We too need to hear this
teaching as a gift. For even though we
were never forced into slavery by others, for many of us our slavery is the
most insidious form of all, a slavery that is self-constructed and self-imposed. We have become slaves to our illusions about
what constitutes success. We have become
slaves to the expectations of others. We
have become slaves to a culture that tells us that we always need more to be
happy. We have become slaves to our own confusion
about our self- worth and to our forgetfulness about where our identity comes
from.
We have become slaves to the
what of our lives because we have been disconnected from the why.
There is much more that we
could talk about in the readings this morning other than this one little verse. We talk about King David and the mixed
motives that made him want to build God a house, and how God responds by saying
that God is the one who will build a house.
Or we could continue the gospel story, and marvel at the way that when
all these people race around the shore of the lake to get to the deserted spot
before Jesus and the disciples, wrecking their plans for a little rest, Jesus
responds not with anger and frustration, but with compassion.
We could talk about those
things. But I’d rather not. Instead I’d rather offer you this gift. Why don’t we take the next few minutes and simply
rest a while.
(If you're reading this, please
take a few minutes to rest)
Amen.
(with thanks to www.workingpreacher.org, a great weekly source for insights about the lectionary readings)