Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Be Afraid! Be Very Afraid! (Isaiah 36:1-3, 13-20; 37:107; Pentecost 23a; Consecration Sunday; November 16, 2014)



Be Afraid!  Be Very Afraid!

Isaiah 36:1-3, 13-20; 37:107
Pentecost 23a
Consecration Sunday
November 16, 2014

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

We are the richest and most powerful people on the planet, perhaps even in history.  Our economy has dominated the world for nearly sixty years and our military is stronger than any conceivable combination of enemies.  And we are afraid.

We are afraid of terrorists.  We willingly submit to indignities when we travel by air because we are afraid and because we think that having a security agent paw through our belongings and gaze at the outline of our bodies under clothes via low-level x-rays will make us safer.  We allow the government to track our phone calls and our emails on the off chance that this intrusion into our privacy will reveal some undetected network of terrorists.

We are afraid of strange diseases like Ebola.  We quiver at descriptions of this disease of poverty, so much so that some of us demand quarantines for health workers, travel embargos from the whole continent of Africa, and a “sealed” border with Mexico.  We’ll feel safe if we hide behind our ten-foot walls and peer out at the rest of the world through the razor wire.

We are afraid of children fleeing from horrible conditions of violence and poverty who hope against hope that we mean the words on the plaque at the foot of the Statue of Liberty.  We round them up, herd them into detention centers, deny them their rights under our own laws, and ship them back as quickly as we can.  We’ll feel safer if we can postpone the coming day when most Americans will not be non-Hispanic whites.

We are often afraid of the wrong things.  We react with near hysteria when a heroic doctor who has been fighting tooth and nail to stem the tide of Ebola in West Africa arrives in the United States with the disease.  When others arrive symptom-free from the same work some call for their quarantine.  But Ebola is not easy to catch and, given modern treatment facilities, the survival rate is very high.  The death toll from Ebola in the United States so far has been: one.  And there are currently no active cases.

If you want something fear, try influenza.  It’s hard to know exactly how many die from this disease each year.  According to the CDC nearly 54,000 died from influenza and/or pneumonia in 2011.[1]  It would be reasonable to be afraid of the flu, even to the point of getting vaccinated every year and learning to wash our hands more often. 

Or how about being afraid of suicide, if not for ourselves, at least for the people around us?  Over 39,000 died intentionally at their own hands in 2011.[2]  I’ll wager that the vast majority of those died from depression, a disease that is treatable.

We’re afraid of terrorists, so we’ve sent our armed forces around the globe to engage them directly and we fire missiles at them from drones.  We mourn the cost in American lives and we count that as a measure of dangerous our enemies are.  But since September 11, 2001, more women have died at the hands of husbands, boyfriends or “ex’s” than service members at the hands of enemies.[3], [4]

We are afraid, often of the wrong things.  We’re easy to scare.  When we’re scared the primitive part of our brain takes over, the part of our brain that we have in common with lizards and birds.  We move into “fight, flight, or freeze” mode.  We’re no longer able to see the big picture or think in a complex way.  When we’re scared, we get bird-brained. 

It’s easy to sell things to bird-brained people.  “Your home is at risk for a burglary; buy a home security system.”  “The brand new appliance we just sold you could break down at any moment; buy an extended warranty.”  “The world is full of people who have guns and want to hurt you; buy a gun.”  “If Republicans win, it will mean the end of life as we know it; vote Democrat.”  “If Democrats win, it will mean the end of life as we know it; vote Republican.” 

But there are also real dangers.  There are times when fear is reasonable and in our reading for today, Judah was going through one of those times.

A thing about life in the little countries at the eastern end of the Mediterranean—like Judah—was that they lived between the ancient superpowers.  To their south and west was Egypt along the Nile River.  To Judah’s north and east were the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers where a series of empires rose and fell: the Sumerians, the Assyrians, the Babylonians, and the Persians.  In Isaiah’s day the Assyrian Empire was moving, conquering Syria, Lebanon, and Israel, one after the other. 

Then Assyria came to Judah, swallowing its towns and villages until there was only Jerusalem left.  The mightiest army in the western world showed up at the gates.  Here is how the story reads in Isaiah:

36:1 Assyria’s King Sennacherib marched against all of Judah’s fortified cities and captured them in the fourteenth year of King Hezekiah. Assyria’s king sent his field commander from Lachish, together with a large army, to King Hezekiah at Jerusalem. He stood at the water channel of the Upper Pool, which is on the road to the field where clothes are washed. Hilkiah’s son Eliakim, who was the palace administrator, Shebna the secretary, and Asaph’s son Joah the recorder went out to them.

13 Then the field commander stood up and shouted in Hebrew at the top of his voice: “Listen to the message of the great king, Assyria’s king. 14 The king says this: Don’t let Hezekiah lie to you. He won’t be able to rescue you. 15 Don’t let Hezekiah persuade you to trust the Lord by saying, ‘The Lord will certainly rescue us. This city won’t be handed over to Assyria’s king.’

16 “Don’t listen to Hezekiah, because this is what Assyria’s king says: Surrender to me and come out. Then each of you will eat from your own vine and fig tree and drink water from your own well 17 until I come to take you to a land just like your land. It will be a land of grain and new wine, a land of bread and vineyards. 18 Don’t let Hezekiah fool you by saying, ‘The Lord will rescue us.’ Did any of the other gods of the nations save their lands from the power of Assyria’s king? 19 Where are the gods of Hamath and Arpad? Where are the gods of Sepharvaim? Did they rescue Samaria from my power? 20 Which one of the gods from those countries has rescued their land from my power? Will the Lord save Jerusalem from my power?”

The Judeans set out to observe the diplomatic niceties.  Judah sent the palace administrator, the royal secretary and a scribe.  Sennacherib’s field commander spoke for the Assyrians.  This meeting was supposed to be a formal one, but Sennacherib’s man broke the rules right away by talking past Judah’s representatives to the anxious and fearful residents of Jerusalem itself.  Not only that, but he did it in Hebrew, so that there would be no chance to soften his words in translation. 

The Assyrian laid out two choices.  The first was the old dream of the good life: They would be resettled in a new place where each would eat from their own vine and fig tree and drink from their own well.  The second choice was to resist.  In that case they would be killed.  All of them.  They should consider carefully and not be deceived by the king or his priests.  The gods of Assyria were stronger than all other gods and they gave victory to their armies.  No gods had been able to defend a city against Assyria and Yahweh would not be able to defend Jerusalem.

Everyone in Jerusalem was scared.  Fear crept through the streets and into every home, from the smallest hovel to the royal palace itself, like a deadly fog.  It infected the king, Hezekiah.

Now Hezekiah wasn’t a bad king.  His security apparatus had done its homework.  They knew Sennacherib was coming.  They knew there was no way to negotiate.  Hezekiah had stoked the defense department.  They had good weapons; they were well-trained; they were ready for almost anything.  But they weren’t ready for this.  There were enemy soldiers as far as the eye could see.  The Assyrians had only to wait for hunger to do its work.  Then it would be a simple matter to overrun the defenses and Jerusalem would be theirs. 

37:1 When King Hezekiah heard this, he ripped his clothes, covered himself with mourning clothes, and went to the Lord’s temple. He sent Eliakim the palace administrator, Shebna the secretary, and the senior priests to the prophet Isaiah, Amoz’s son. They were all wearing mourning clothes. They said to him, “Hezekiah says this: Today is a day of distress, punishment, and humiliation. It’s as if children are ready to be born, but there’s no strength to see it through. Perhaps the Lord your God heard all the words of the field commander who was sent by his master, Assyria’s king. He insulted the living God! Perhaps he will punish him for the words that the Lord your God has heard. Offer up a prayer for those few people who still survive.”

When King Hezekiah’s servants got to Isaiah, Isaiah said to them, “Say this to your master: The Lord says this: Don’t be afraid at the words you heard, which the officers of Assyria’s king have used to insult me. I’m about to mislead him, so when he hears a rumor, he’ll go back to his own country. Then I’ll have him cut down by the sword in his own land.”

King Hezekiah ripped his clothes, the sign of mourning.  His leading servants, Eliakim, Shebna, and the senior priests put on mourning clothes.  It was as if the siege were already over, the city overrun, the people slaughtered, and the Temple left as a pile of smoking rubble.  I’ll give this to Hezekiah: even in his fear he held the possibility that Yahweh would act, if only to defend his reputation.  Perhaps Isaiah could tell him if Yahweh would yet come to their aid or whether Hezekiah had to accept utter defeat. 

The people of Jerusalem were afraid; the king was afraid, the priests and royal servants were afraid; the army of Judah was afraid.  To all of them, but especially to Hezekiah, Isaiah’s message from Yahweh was this: “Don’t be afraid!”  Appearances were deceiving.  The armies of Assyria would be recalled.  Judah would be spared.  Sennacherib himself would be assassinated. 

And so it happened.  A few days later those in Jerusalem awoke to discover that the army of Assyria had vanished in the night.  Sennacherib went home where he was killed by two of his sons.

To a fearful world, God says simply, “Don’t be afraid.”  All of our fears, even the real ones, but especially the false fears that our world is so good at cultivating, all of our fears are unnecessary.  Wherever God is fear evaporates.  Do not be afraid.

What does this have to do with Consecration Sunday?  Much. 

When we are afraid, we hold back.  We imagine all sorts of things that can happen.  We gather our resources around us, like Hezekiah stockpiling water and food in expectation of a siege.  We hoard our energy, our time, and our money.  Generosity and fear are seldom found together. 

Now is the time for us to set aside our fears so that we may be the people God dreams for us to be and enter whole-heartedly into this life that God has called us to live.  Our strength, our thoughts, our affections, and, yes, even our wallets are summoned.  Be unafraid.  Be very unafraid.

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