Thursday, December 12, 2013

Regime Change (Isaiah 11:1-10; Advent 2A; December 8, 2013)



Regime Change

Isaiah 11:1-10
Advent 2A
December 8, 2013

Rev. John M. Caldwell, PhD
First United Methodist Church
Decorah, IA

“A shoot will grow up from the stump of Jesse…He will judge the needy with righteousness…The wolf will live with the lamb…the calf and the young lion will feed together, and a little child will lead them…the root of Jesse will stand as a signal to the peoples…”  This is a lovely poem.  It’s a fantastic poem.  By that I mean that it is made of the stuff of fantasies.

It is a dream barely rooted at all in reality.  “The wolf will live the lamb, the leopard will lie down with the young goat, the calf and the young lion will feed together, and a little child will lead them.”  Really?  Ferocious meat-eaters and mild grazing animals—all younglings at that—will live in peace? 

Over the centuries we’ve sanded this verse down until we’re left with “the lion shall lie down with the lamb.”  The phrase has a nice rhythm and it has those alliterative l’s:  “the lion shall lie down with the lamb.”  But whichever carnivore and whichever herbivore you prefer, it’s still a pretty unlikely scene.   Woody Allen is supposed to have said, “The lion shall lie down with the lamb, but the lamb won’t get much sleep.”  He expresses our skepticism pretty well.

But I think Woody may have missed the point.  This is poetry, not a treatise on the evolutionary future of canis lupus or panthera pardus.  What we have in this poem or song is a picture of a peaceable world or at least a zone within our world in which violence has no place.  “They won’t harm or destroy anywhere on my holy mountain.”  The fantasy of this poem is of a world so transformed, so changed, that even animals that get eaten and the animals that eat them will live together in peace.  And that picture is certainly fantastic.

And, if you thought that picture is unlikely, try the other major image that the poem plays with: human governance that is just.  This image is, in anything, even more fantastic than the first.  Human governance that is just?  Have we ever seen it? 

We know how the world is.  Those with power—and in our day that means those who have money—do not use their power to make sure the playing field is level.  No, they use their power to make sure that they keep their power.  The very rich use their money to support political leaders who will make and enforce laws so that they may become even richer.  Political leaders use their power to secure money from the very rich so that they can buy advertizing that persuades voters to vote for them so they can remain in power.  This is, as far as I can see, the only subject of bi-partisan agreement in the halls of power anywhere.  This is how it works, so that what is supposed to be a democracy functions best for the very rich and for the rest of us, not so much.

But do not imagine that corrupt government is only a modern thing.  Jerusalem was no shining beacon in the late eighth century bce either.  The king was supposed to give justice whether you were rich or poor, whether you were well-connected or marginal, like the widows, orphans, and immigrants.  Can you guess whether that’s the way it worked out?  Yeah, you’re right.  The king may have been descended from David, part of his family tree, but it is clear that the wisdom of Solomon was not part of the legacy that got passed along.  In its core the family tree was rotten; it was much weaker than it looked.

The poet has a rather far-fetched fantasy.  He dreams of good government.  He dreams a king who doesn’t make his decisions based on appearances without regard for making friends with the rich.  He dreams a king who will decide for the needy and for those “who suffer in the land.”  He dreams a king who will prosecute the bankers who launder drug money and jail those who write deceptive mortgages, rather than settling for a cut of their illegal income as our Justice Department has done. 

Our translation says that this king will judge with righteousness, that this king will wear righteousness like a belt around his waist, but when we hear “righteousness” we tend to think of private morality.  The prophet is not imagining a king who is a good person when no one is looking, although that certainly isn’t a bad thing.  Justice is better word than righteousness here, I think.  “Justice, justice, you shall seek!” cries Moses in the Torah.[1]  The prophet dreams a king who not only seeks justice but does justice.

This is the poet’s fantasy: a world that is so transformed that the animals that usually get eaten will not fear the animals that usually eat them and the poor and needy will welcome the king’s decisions instead of dreading them. 

That’s the poet’s dream, the poet’s fantasy.  Following his example, we can dream dreams, too.  We, too, can imagine a better world and better lives for ourselves and children, for our neighbors and their children, for anyone who shares this planet with us and for their children.  I dream that dream.

I dream a world in which no child is afraid of her parents or her mother’s boyfriend.  I dream a world in which no one who works full-time has to rely on government assistance to feed their family.  I dream a world in which our friends in El Salvador do not have to fear being bullied by multi-national corporations and the governments that support them.  I dream a world in which our young people do not have to sell their futures to a bank in order to get an education.  I dream a world in which our nation’s and our world’s cultures and races and religions and sexual orientations are embraced as a source of wonder and delight and not a threat.  I dream a world in which we have ceased regarding the earth and the intricate and delicate web of life that sustains us as resources to be used and untapped wealth to be exploited and instead have regulated ourselves so that we live sustainably in the world as its partner instead of as its exploiter.  I dream a world in which we have learned to say no to the consumer capitalist machine and have recovered the time we need for rest, for reflection, and for deepening our relationships with each other, with our world and with our God.

Yes, these are pieces of my dream.  I dream it because I see the dismal brokenness of a world where that dream is only a dream.  I dream it because I long for remedies to our brokenness and relief for our suffering.

You dream dreams, too.  Our dreams, I am sure, differ in the details and maybe even in substance, but we are dreamers, you and I.  It is part of the boon and the burden of being human.  And our dreams have as little and as much relation to reality as Isaiah’s dreams.

And yet.  And yet.  There is one more image in this poem.  It frames the poem, since the poet speaks of it both first and last.  It is the bread for this dream sandwich.  At the beginning of our reading we have, “A shoot will grow up from the stump of Jesse,” and at the end, “On that day, the root of Jesse will stand as a signal to the peoples.”  Jesse, of course, was King David’s father, so this image of the root or stump of Jesse must refer to David’s dynasty.  What is left of Jesse’s line, David’s dynasty, is only a stump or root.  The tree is broken off at the ground.  The corruption at its core has led to rotten hollowness and the tree’s eventual fall.  That would appear to be the end of dreaming for Judah and for its prophet. 

But it is not the end of dreaming.  New life grows up from stumps if the root is sound and new lift is possible for God’s people.  The dream is not dead, not futile, if the root is still alive and the poem calls us to imagine that the root is very much alive.  For the poet, new life is about to sprout and that new life will bring with it a revival of hope in David’s line, hope for just rule, hope for a peaceable world.

In the Christian tradition we have identified this hope and indeed this very poem itself with Jesus the Messiah.  That’s why we read it during Advent.  At least looking back on it we can see a certain pattern that we also see in Jesus.  When we read this now, following this line of reading, we see a partial fulfillment in Jesus and we expect a complete fulfillment at Jesus’ return. 

But there are other ways to read this image.  This week a great tree fell who was also and in his own way a shoot from Jesse’s stump, a branch growing of the root of Jesse.  The dream of just rule and a renewed earth were part of what shaped Nelson Mandela.  Of course, he has been the focus of media attention the last few days.  He is dead, now, so it has become safe to remember the work that he did.  We can even do it selectively and in a way that suits us since he is no longer in a position to contradict us.  Ever since Nelson Mandela was freed from prison, we in the West have been domesticating him and now that work will accelerate.  The same thing is happening to him that happened to Martin Luther King, Jr.  He is being shaped into what will eventually become an innocuous figure whose struggle for freedom for his people posed and poses no threat to the deep structures of the way the world works.  He is being turned into a saint, an object of devotion.  In a very real, though symbolic way, this will be his second death.

If we stop with this, we are left with a very passive reading—one where our role is simply to wait.  We ask, “Who are we waiting for?”  Our tradition answers, we are waiting for Jesus the Messiah, the Anointed One, the Christ.  Or we are waiting for the next Nelson Mandela, the next Martin Luther King, Jr., or the next MonseƱor Oscar Romero to be anointed.  We are waiting for the next messiah (with a small “m”) who can point the way and lead the way forward, who can help us fashion our dreams, making a little change here or a little change there.

But we are also anointed.  We were baptized in water and signed with the sign of Jesus.  “The Lord’s spirit will rest upon” this shoot that is to grow up from the stump of Jesse, says the poet, but the Spirit rests upon us, as well.  We were all anointed with the Spirit at our baptism and renewed and strengthened in the Spirit at Confirmation and renewed every time we come to the Table, every time we take our stand with God’s people.

Read this way this poem is no longer a call to waiting, to patience, or to resignation.  Now this poem becomes a summons:  We are the shoot that grows from Jesse’s stump.  We are the ones upon whom the Spirit of the Lord rests, a spirit of wisdom and understanding, a spirit of planning and strength, a spirit of knowledge and love of God.  We are the ones who must see past the glitter and the gloss.  We are the ones who must decide for the needy and intervene on behalf of those who suffer in the land.  We are the ones who must call the unjust to account.  We are the ones who are called to renew the earth, and to banish violence from all our relationships.

We are not waiting for “the Messiah.”  We are not waiting for Mandela or King or Romero or anyone else.  We are the ones we have been waiting for.  The only thing that is left to do is to wake up.  It’s time to wake up from an unjust world’s long nightmare of inequality.  It’s time to wake up from a broken world’s long nightmare of war and violence.  It’s time to wake up from our long sleep of patient resignation.  It’s time to dream our own dreams.  It’s time to cry out for justice.  It’s time to be the new life from Jesse’s stump.  It’s time to wake up.

This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA.




[1] Deuteronomy 16:20.


What Time Is It? (Romans 13:11-14; 1st Sunday of Advent - A; December 1, 2013)



What Time Is It?

Romans 13:11-14
1st Sunday of Advent - A
December 1, 2013

Rev. John M. Caldwell, PhD
First United Methodist Church
Decorah, IA

Funny things happen with time at this time of year.  Time progresses at the rate of twenty-four hours each day, sixty minutes each hour and sixty seconds each minute, so in theory at least, it should move at the same rate for everyone.  But we know better than that.  Parents who are pressed for time all the time will find that the days between now and Christmas will fly past while too little progress will be made on their to do lists for Christmas.  For young children on the other hand time has almost stopped.  It will be an eternity between now and Christmas morning when they will discover which of their wishes have been granted and which will have to be deferred, perhaps forever.  I’ve given up waiting for my robot arm.

It has become a common-place that ancient Greeks had two different words for time.  One word, chronos, is time that comes in periods, like hours or days or years.  This kind of time has duration.  It can be measured. 

Various tools have been used to measure time.  As long ago as 3500 bce, the Egyptians used the shadows cast by tall towers to break a day down into something like hours.  Sun dials of various designs followed.  Sometime around 1500 bce, sundials were joined by water clocks.  Various mechanical clocks followed, with the big breakthrough coming in 1656 ad, when Christiaan Huygens, a Dutch scientist, invented the pendulum-regulated clock.  In their turn pendulum-regulated clocks were replaced by quartz crystal and atomic clocks.  The standard now is an atomic fountain that uses the resonating frequency of cesium 133.  9,192,631,770 cycles of the cesium atom make one second.[1]  The atomic fountain operated by the National Institute of Standards and Technology is accurate to within one second every 30 million years.  I would say that this is close enough, but there is a mercury ion clock under development that will be so accurate that if it had been started at the precise moment of the Big Bang it would be off now by about two seconds.[2]

The time in our lesson from Romans has nothing to do with this kind of time.  This time is the other kind of time that the Greeks had a word for.  This time is kairos, time that comes in moments.  A moment has no duration; it is not a period of time.  “Now” is a moment.  So is “the right time.”  Kairos is about timeliness, rather than length of time.  It’s about timing.

“You know what time it is,” writes Paul to the church at Rome.  That’s kairos, not chronos.  “The hour”—that is to say, the moment—“has already come for you to wake up from your sleep.”  Dawn is coming.  For Paul that means that the moment has come to take up the demands of ethical life.  Dawn was the time when the ancient ninety-nine percent, that is, anyone who had to work, would get up and prepare for the working day.  The ancient one percent lived off the labor of others, so they could get up whenever they woke up and that would be pretty late in the day, because they would spend the evenings and nights attending symposia.  This sounds very academic and high-minded, but the word symposium means “drinking party.”  This explains Paul’s reference to those who do not “live in the day” but spend their time “in partying and getting drunk…in sleeping around and obscene behavior…in fighting and obsession.”   

For Paul’s readers a timely moment has arrived: the moment to get up and get dressed.  “Our salvation is nearer than when we first had faith.”  This sounds like chronos, but it is not.  We can’t ask, “How much nearer?  How many days or month or years until our salvation—our health, our holiness, our wholeness—get here?”  That would be the chronos question, but Paul isn’t interested in that question or its answer.  Paul is interested in what is appropriate to this moment—now—and in what today demands of us.  Paul tells us the meaning of the moment, and the decisions that are appropriate to this moment, not the duration of the period between now and some other time.

Our life as Christ’s people takes place as a series of moments, not in periods of time.  We live in a series of “now’s.”  We live in kairos, not chronos. 

And yet we all have watches and we all look at clocks.  In fact, some congregations have clocks in the sanctuary.  This signals that, however much we might know that our life is to be lived in kairos, chronos will not go away or leave us alone.  The time of worship—which is pointedly grounded in kairos—must be made to answer to chronos. 

Kairos is confined to a piece of chronos about an hour long each week.  Kairos is no longer able to wander freely, to erupt anywhere with its announcement that, regardless of what the clock says, now is the time to wake up, now is the time of our salvation, our healing, our wholeness, our holiness.  Kairos has been rounded up and confined by treaty to an hour-long reservation, from which it may not stray.

This is part of the meaning of the encroachment of Black Friday into Thanksgiving Day.  Chronos is time that can be measured, divided and sub-divided.  Anything that can be counted or measured is already halfway to becoming a commodity that can be bought and sold.  When it is seized for private use, the process is completed.  Chronos is time commodified.  So it is that Thanksgiving Day is passing, with hardly a grumbling complaint, from being a part of the commons of time for the use of communities of various sizes, from towns to families, to being the possession of the modern one percent who use it to demand the labor of the ninety-nine percent so that even greater wealth may be concentrated in their hands.  We are experiencing an encroaching tyranny of the private into our common life.  We can reclaim some space for our commons of time.

We can also reclaim some space for kairos.  Kairos, finally, is the meaning of the Advent season.  Advent is not a countdown to anything.  Especially it is not a way of letting consumers know how much chronos they have left until Christmas, when all their shopping must be completed.  We can reclaim some space, but let no one imagine that it will be easy.  Advent takes place during consumer capitalism’s High Holy Days.  There is no place in that religion for kairos and still less for community commons.  If we want a place in our own lives for these things, we will have to make that space.  And it will not be easy.

That’s why Paul lays it out in such stark terms.  It is time to wake up.  It is time to get dressed for work, wrapping Jesus around us like clothing, setting aside the greed, impatience, and the narrowly-defined interests that consumer capitalism fosters, the vices that it calls virtues.  If we go with the flow this time of year we will not find ourselves drifting toward God.  It is time to wake up.

This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA.


[1] “A Walk Through Time,” http://www.nist.gov/pml/general/time/index.cfm, accessed November 29, 2013.
[2] “It’s About Time,” http://whyfiles.org/078time/index.php?g=2.txt, accessed November 29, 2013.