Genesis 28:10-19a; Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43
When we first moved here, Mike started pulling up the
runners of straggly grass in our yard. But there was too much of it to get rid
of it all. It turns out that some Florida grass looks just like Michigan crabgrass.
And it was our lawn he was trying to get rid of!
In today’s gospel reading, Jesus tells a parable about growing
wheat. This one mystifies some of his listeners because the ending is hard to comprehend.
We understand the words, but leaving weeds growing in a field of wheat doesn’t
make sense to farmers. I am not good at weeding, but I know my small patch of
flowers does better when they are not crowded out by weeds.
But the parable says to leave the weeds
alone. The crops will be sorted out at harvest time. If the wheat plants are
believers and the weed plants are the enemies, who is to say that the enemies are
no longer enemies by the time of the harvest.
I discovered this story in my preparation for the sermon. Pr
Jack was a hospice chaplain who had been called to the room of one of the
patients. As he entered the room, Walter, the eldest son, greeted Pr Jack and introduced
himself. “Pastor,” Walter said, “My mother taught me all about Jesus a long
time ago. I gave my heart to him 27 years ago and have been active in church ever
since that time. The reason I called you to come to our room is the family in
the next room. They don’t seem to have expressed a belief in Jesus and I’m
worried about them.”
After spending some time with the patient and her family, Pr
Jack entered the next room and found a family gathered around their loved one.
They were telling stories of their lives together, enjoying the last few days they
would have together on earth, just like Walter’s family. Pastor Jack didn’t know
if the family was Christian or Jewish or Muslim or no faith at all. But they
seemed to know love and caring as much as Walter’s family. He wasn’t worried
about them at all.
… Had he lived long ago, Pastor Jack might have been worried
about Jacob at this time in Jacob’s life. He is a scoundrel, a cheat. We would
not approve of the way he does business, if he were our friend. But God has
chosen this family as the path to blessing all the families of the world. So,
we have to accept this flawed person as our many-many-times great-grandpa. God
certainly did; and it turns out Jacob learned his lessons as he aged.
Right now, in today’s story from Genesis, he is on the run,
fleeing the anger of his brother Esau for stealing his birthright and the final
blessing of his father. He is running toward the old family home in Haran,
where he will stay for a number of years. Right now, he is terrified his
brother has followed him to punish him, so his sleep is troubled.
Yet, he dreams of God’s encouragement, God’s promises. “I am the God of your father Isaac and your grandfather Abraham. The promises I made to them, I give to you, also.” Jacob’s response is, “Wow! God is in this place, and I didn’t know it!” Jacob wakes up and turns his pillow into an altar and gives the place a name, Beth-el, house of God.
We discussed this comment by Jacob on Wednesday morning and
talked about places we have named as holy. They were all quiet places in nature
where we could hear the silence and the critters. But nature is not the only location
where we have found holiness. We have found holy moments, God-present moments,
in church – in this church, even – and in youth camps and adult retreats.
God moments happen any time and any place: workplaces and
council meetings and football or baseball games and Hospice rooms. We might
have an encounter with God when we talk with a restaurant server or auto
mechanic. We might even have an encounter with God when we are with someone
with whom we disagree on politics or religion, or whether new housing is needed
where the golf course used to be.
Holy conversations happen when we accept a person for who
they are, no matter who they are. When we have a conversation based on what we
can agree on, there is room for God to be with us and guide us to something more
meaningful. This is true even if our conversation partner is someone like that
scoundrel Jacob.
… One more story, this one a small scene in a Hallmark movie.
Annika and Ryan are trying to find her grandfather’s first love, Ruth Barlow. They
gather a list of possible Ruth Barlows and interview them. Each Ruth tells a
love story.
One of those stories is about flowers and weeds. This Ruth
tells how she met the woman of her dreams. She talked about how she loved
flowers and planted lots of them in careful beds all around her yard. She
carefully weeded them to keep out unwanted plants.
Ruth began to look for the flowers in Mary’s yard and
discovered great beauty. They had been married for many years by the time Annika
and Ryan interviewed her.
… It is so easy for us to judge those things or people or places that are different as imperfect, as unworthy of God’s love and our attention. When we look more carefully, through God’s eyes, we discover unexpected beauty. We discover that God lives there, too.
So this week, I hope you will look around and see beauty in new
places, and feel God’s presence in your conversations. And, as always, I look forward to your
stories.
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