Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Sacred Laziness and the Gift of Wisdom (1 Kings 19:2-16; Lent 4 (series); March 30, 2014)



Sacred Laziness and the Gift of Wisdom

1 Kings 19:2-16
Lent 4 (series)
March 30, 2014

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

We're struggling in our culture, in our country, in our world, with wisdom.  Oh, we have enormous amounts of knowledge and more of it all the time.  Buckminster Fuller observed that the world's knowledge doubled every century until 1900 and then every twenty-five years by the end of WW II.  Now, it is said that the world's knowledge is doubling every thirteen months.[1]

I don't know if I accept that.  It is certainly true that every time I snap a picture with my phone there are two million more bytes of data in the world.  Judging by the number of pictures posted on Facebook, there are a lot of us snapping picture with cell phones.  That adds up to a lot of data being produced.  But I hesitate to call one more "selfie" more information, let alone more knowledge.  And it certainly isn't wisdom.

We usually say that wisdom is the result of much experience.  Older people, we say, are wise because of their long years and many experiences.  But wisdom is more than that.  Wisdom is the result of experience and reflection on that experience.  Reflection is what happens when we give our experiences enough time and enough attention so that they can teach us what they have to teach.  Wisdom doesn't come automatically with years and there are, sad to say, plenty of foolish older people who have gained little from their years because they have never given their lives time to speak to them. 

A tragedy of our era is how little we respect the older members of our families and communities.  If we respected them more, they might grow and become our elders.  They might even do the hard work needed to become wise. 

But we don't really value wisdom.  We've stopped looking to our elders for wisdom and many of them have stopped pursuing it.  They're "spending their children's inheritance," as the bumper sticker says.  They're spending their last years shuttling back and forth between their winter and summer homes, playing golf, and complaining to anyone who will listen about the generations coming behind them.  There are a number of reasons for this, I suppose.  Among them would be the pace of technological change.  While older people are trying to wrap their heads around email, young people have moved on to text messaging, Twitter, and social media.  Ten years ago or so, my sister Jody, a librarian at Drew University and the head of bibliographic instruction, started giving first year students a tour of the library stacks to show them where the books are kept.  There are some things that cannot be found on line.  Some information, some knowledge, is to be found in the pages of an actual book that you can hold in your hand, an actual book with pages that you turn, a book that has that slightly musty smell that permeates all academic libraries.

We don't really value wisdom.  With wisdom neglected and with older adults so far behind the knowledge curve it is little wonder that so many of them have decided to spend the balance of their lives in the pursuit of frivolous irrelevance. 

Our culture and our world are facing a deep crisis that we will either meet in the next twenty or thirty years or the earth itself will be so changed that humanity will face oppressive and widespread misery.   Our attitude toward wisdom needs to change.  We have plenty of data, information and knowledge, enough to tell us the nature of the interlocking crises that are bearing down on us.  But none of those things will tell us how to meet the challenge.  None of these things will call forth the courage needed to make the decisions we need to make.  And none of these things will give us the resolve to move forward and keep moving forward in the absence of absolute certainty.

For these things we need wisdom and it's in short supply.  I went to Ask.com and asked, "How can we save humankind?"  The first response was to ask if I meant, "How can we save mankind?"  No, that's not what I meant.  I meant womankind, too.  So I already know that I'll have to make my way through a certain amount of sexism.  What else is new? 

Okay, so, "How do we save mankind?"  What pops up first are a series of ads.  "Mankind: The Story of All of Us" at history.com.  History might be helpful, so all right.  Then comes "How We Can Save" at wow.com.  After that comes "Can Saves" at target.com.  Then there is a link to nature.org that connects us to information about water supplies.  Better, maybe.  Then a link to a directory of small businesses provided by Dun and Bradstreet.  I like small business, but I'm not sure there is an answer to my question in that directory. 

Next come several references to a book entitled, Only You Can Save Mankind."  This sounds promising but it turns out that Only You Can Save Mankind is a science fiction novel by Terry Pratchett.  Knowing Pratchett's work, it's sure to be funny and entertaining, but it's not what I was looking for.

You cannot Ask.com for wisdom.  You cannot Google it.  Wisdom might be found somewhere on the interwebs, but there is no algorithm that would recognize wisdom if it popped up.  It takes a wise person to recognize wisdom.  We're in trouble.

We'll have to become wise the hard way, by being open to our own and each other's experiences and by spending the empty time we need to let that process work.  "Sabbath," says Wayne Muller, "is an incubator for wisdom."[2]  Sabbath--rest, cessation of work--is what is needed.  But Sabbath as we know is in short supply.  We keep ourselves very busy.  We are doing good things, of course.  By themselves each of the things we do is important and justifiable.  But together they guarantee that we will never have the time for reflection.  They guarantee that we will never become wise.  Muller said it this way twenty-five years ago and, if anything, what he observes is even truer now than it was then:

Our culture invariably supposes that action and accomplishment are better than rest, that doing something—anything—is better than doing nothing. Because of our desire to succeed, to meet these ever-growing expectations, we do not rest. Because we do not rest, we lose our way. We miss the compass points that would show us where to go, we bypass the nourishment that would give us succor. We miss the quiet that would give us wisdom. We miss the joy and love born of effortless delight. Poisoned by this hypnotic belief that good things come only through unceasing determination and tireless effort, we can never truly rest. And for want of rest, our lives are in danger.[3]

We're not the only ones living out the truth that Muller has uncovered.  The prophet in our today's reading, Elijah the Tishbite, lived it too.  He was someone I think we could have admired had he lived among us.  Admired and disliked.  He had a tendency to meddle in politics.  He assumed that God's passionate commitment to justice required him to do that.  Our reading this morning comes at the end of what was arguably the most dramatic episode of his ministry. 

In Elijah's day, the covenant people were politically divided.  The kingdom of Judah in the South was ruled by members of David's dynasty.  The Kingdom of Israel in the North was ruled by a series of dynasties.  In Elijah's time King Ahab and Queen Jezebel were sponsoring and leading Israel in the worship of Canaanite gods, a divine couple named Ba'al and Asherah.  Ba'al and Asherah were fertility gods.  Ahab and Jezebel were leading Israel to turn its back on Yahweh their covenant God.  Yahweh sent Elijah north to overthrow the Ba'al and Asherah cult and call the people back to covenant faithfulness to Yahweh.  So Elijah went north.

He called out the prophets of Ba'al and Asherah and challenged them to a contest.  Israelites gathered to watch and see what would happen.  Elijah addressed them: "How long will you go limping with two different opinions? If the Lord is God, follow him; but if Baal, then follow him....I, even I only, am left a prophet of the Lord; but Baal's prophets number four hundred fifty."  The four hundred fifty of Ba'al's prophets would take a bull, butchering it and laying its pieces on wood laid on a stone altar.  Elijah would do the same.  Then the prophets of Ba'al would appeal to their god to send fire.  Elijah would call upon Yahweh.  Whichever God sent fire would be recognized as Israel's God.  This seemed like a good idea to the gathered people. 

The prophets of Ba'al went first.  They cut up the bull and laid it on the wood on a stone altar.  Then they called on Ba'al.  "Send fire!" they prayed.  They danced.  They even cut themselves so that they offered their own blood to Ba'al.  But there was no fire. 

Evening was coming and the prophets of Ba'al had been at it all day.  Then Elijah took twelve stones and built an altar to Yahweh.  He laid wood on the altar.  He laid the pieces of his cut-up bull on the wood.  Then he dug a trench around the altar and had water poured over the offering and the wood until the trench around the altar was full of water.  Then he prayed, "O Lord, God of Abraham, Isaac, and Israel, let it be known this day that you are God in Israel, that I am your servant, and that I have done all these things at your bidding.  Answer me, O Lord, answer me, so that this people may know that you, O Lord, are God, and that you have turned their hearts back."

Just like that fire fell upon the offering and burned it up together with wood on the altar.  The fire even evaporated all the water.  The people fell on their faces and cried, "The Lord indeed is God!"  Elijah had them seize the four hundred fifty prophets of Ba'al and Asherah, took them to a nearby gully, and killed them all, dumping their bodies into the gully.

Of course, when Ahab and Jezebel found out about what had happened, they were furious.  Jezebel threatened Elijah with death.  Elijah ran south toward Judah.  He ran right into Judah, through it, and out the other side, still running.  He finally collapsed under a tree and prayed to die.

Instead, he fell asleep.  The next thing he knew an angel was shaking him awake.  "Elijah, get up.  Have something to eat."  There was a flatcake baking on a stone and a jar of water.  Elijah ate the cake and drank the water.  And then he fell asleep again.  Again, the angel shook him awake.  "Elijah, have some more to eat and drink."  Elijah did that and continued on his way to Mount Horeb.

At Horeb Elijah spent the night in a cave where he was met by God who asked him what he was doing there.  Elijah replied that he had been working very hard because God's people in the north had forsaken God, thrown down God's altars, killed all of God's prophets of whom Elijah was the last, and they were trying to kill him.  God told Elijah to stand out by entrance of the cave because God would pass by.  There was a great wind, an earthquake, and a fire, but God was not present in any of them.  Then there was "a sound of sheer silence" as the NSRV has it, "a sound.  Thin.  Quiet" in the CEB.  Elijah covered his face and left his cave to meet God.  "Elijah," said God, "why are you here?"  Elijah gave God the same answer as before, that he had been working very hard because God's people in the north had forsaken God, thrown down God's altars, killed all of God's prophets of whom Elijah was the last, and they were trying to kill him.

This is an odd thing.  Three times Elijah has said that he is the last of Yahweh's prophets.  But it isn't true.  Ahab's right hand man, Obadiah, had given shelter to one hundred of Yahweh's prophets, hiding them in two different caves and providing them with food and water.  And furthermore, Elijah knows this.  Obadiah told him this back in chapter eighteen. 

But Elijah is tired.  When we're tired we miss things.  Our view of the world becomes distorted.  We pay too much attention to some things and not enough to others.  Elijah missed what Obadiah told him.  And missing that important information, Elijah comes to a foolish conclusion about his world.  He comes to believe that God's justice is a hopeless cause.  He becomes despondent.  He comes to believe that the cause of God's justice is about him.  "I, have been very zealous...I alone am left, and they are seeking my life."  If anyone is in need of wisdom, it is one of God's prophets.

So what does God do for Elijah who has lost the way of wisdom?  The first thing that God does is to make sure that Elijah catches up on his sleep.  Then God feeds him.  God gives him some work: a couple of kings to anoint and a successor to name.  "Oh, and by the way," God says, "there are seven thousand Israelites who have remained faithful and who do not worship Ba'al and Asherah."   Rested, Elijah is ready to gain some wisdom, or perhaps to regain it.  God needed Elijah's wisdom in his time.

God needs our wisdom for our world.  We need Sabbath because it is "an incubator for wisdom."

My first preaching professor had a colleague who spent a good deal of time sitting on a dock by a river with a fishing pole in his hands, but he seldom caught anything.  For one thing, he didn't bother to bait his hook.  My professor asked him about it.  He said he wasn't actually fishing.  He was sitting and thinking.  Sometimes he worked on his sermon in his head.  Sometimes he just thought. 

Why the fishing pole, then?  His friend said, "Well, if I just sat here, my people would think I was lazy.  If it looks like I'm fishing, that's good enough for most of my folks."  This was a wise man or at least a man on his way to wisdom.

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[1] David R. Schilling, “Knowledge Doubling Every 12 Months, Soon to be Every 12 Hours,” Industry Tap into News (2013).
[2] Wayne Muller, Sabbath: Finding Rest, Renewal, and Delight in Our Busy Lives (Bantam Books, 1999), 165.

[3] Ibid., 1.

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