Earth Day

Saturday, March 20, 2021

Sermon: B Epiphany 4/Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., January 24, 2021, "Throw the demon out!"

 B Epiphany 4 (2)/MLK OL SJUCC 2021
Mark 1:21-25; Mark 5:1-20
January 17, 2021

           Toni Morrison’s Pulitzer Prize winning novel, Beloved, is set outside Cincinnati, Ohio, several years after the Civil War with the characters haunted by the enduring trauma of pre-Civil War slavery.  In this setting, fleeing and freed African-American men, women, and children looked to Baby Suggs as their spiritual leader—“uncalled, unrobed, and unanointed.”  Baby Suggs gathered the company of her people to worship in what they called the Clearing—described as a wide-open place cut deep in the woods.  Worship in the Clearing happened in this way: 

 

After situating herself on a huge flat-sided rock, Baby Suggs bowed her head and prayed silently.  The company watched her from the trees.  They knew she was ready when she put her stick down.  Then she shouted, “Let the children come!” and they ran from the trees toward her.

 

“Let your mothers hear you laugh,” she told them, and the woods rang.  The adults looked on and could not help smiling.

 

Then “Let the grown men come,” she shouted.  They stepped out one by one from among the ringing trees.

 

“Let your wives and your children see you dance,” she told them, and groundlife shuddered under their feet.

 

Finally she called the women to her.  “Cry,” she told them.  “For the living and the dead.  Just cry.”  And without covering their eyes, the women let loose. 

 

It started that way:  laughing children, dancing men, crying women, and then it got mixed up.  Women stopped crying and danced; men sat down and cried; children danced, women laughed, children cried until, exhausted and riven, all and each lay about the Clearing damp and gasping for breath.  In the silence that followed, Baby Suggs, holy, offered up to them her great big heart.[1]

 

Baby Suggs went on to tell them to love their flesh, for they do not; to love their eyes, for they’d rather pick them out; love their hands for they only use them to tie, bind, and chop them off; to love their mouths, their arms, their inside parts, and, finally, to love their hearts. 

           In a world which hated, despised, and spat upon brown and black skin, Baby Suggs exorcised the unclean spirit, the demon, which sought lodging and home in flesh, eyes, hands, mouths, arms, inside parts, and hearts.  That demon told them they were less than human, without agency, and less than the Children of God.  If the demon was to be exorcised from their community, it would begin with the worship and spiritual practice found in the Clearing with the loving of the inside and outside of that brown and black skin. 

           But the demon came.  A young woman named Sethe, nursing one child and pregnant with another child, milked like a cow by the young men of the family who owned her, decided when she escaped to Ohio that none of her children would ever again know slavery.  She escaped the plantation of “Sweet Home” in Kentucky when she was 9 months pregnant.  When Sethe knew the slave owner and the sheriff were on the way to find her family outside Cincinnati, Ohio, and return them all to slavery, Sethe took her children with her to the barn. 

           When they found her, Sethe had already killed her infant child, Beloved, and was getting ready to kill the remaining children.  From that day forward, the child, Beloved, haunted Sethe and all of her relationships.  Though Beloved made Sethe’s life a living hell, Sethe could not let go her lost child and all the trauma associated with it.  Whether it was a mother’s yearning for her lost child, the guilt Sethe felt for taking her life, the breaking of her spirit in grief and sadness, Sethe just could not let Beloved go.  Beloved offered Sethe an odd comfort. 

           I believe Beloved is one of the few modern stories that tells the radical story of the Gospel of Mark.  Much like Baby Suggs in Beloved, Jesus comes uncalled, unrobed, and unanointed to exorcize the demons from the Galileean countryside.  We read part of the Gospel lesson we had for Advent, the Scripture which begins Jesus’s public ministry.  The second Gospel lesson we viewed, is Mark, chapter 5, other than the crucifixion, the height of the gospel.  They are both reminders that Jesus is framed as an exorcist in the Gospel of Mark.

           These unclean spirits, these demons, have all the right head knowledge and even knows Jesus to be holy.  The demons protest, scream, yell, act as if they are the ones being persecuted.  The demons cry out in pain, begging Jesus to just leave it alone.  They create a scene by shouting out their spiritual knowledge.  Jesus is willing to endure their pain and is unmoved by their faith language to lead in courage.  The pain of transformation and becoming is necessary.  Using faith language does not make them anything less than evil spirits.

           While we tend to think of exorcisms as something that went out with modern science or only fit for Hollywood movies, studies of social science have concluded that demon possession is actually a world-wide phenomenon throughout most of history involving social tension, class conflict, and economic exploitation.[2]

           In what is now the African country of Zimbabwe, the Lunda-Luvale tribes sometimes had people who suffered from possession by spirits.  A special, 20th Century version of this spirit possession, is called bindele.  This phenomenon among the Lunda-Luvale tribes is “caused by possession by other spirits [that] may be considered to reflect a tension between the society of the victim and that of the group represented by the spirit.”  Bindele means, literally, “European” or, metaphorically, “European colonialist.”  Sufferers from bindele are believed to be possessed by the spirit of a European.[3]

           In our main gospel story for today, Jesus encounters the Gerasene demoniac and asks the demon its name.  The demon replies, “Legion.”  Legion had only one meaning in first century Rome.  Legion referred to a division of Roman soldiers.[4] 

The meaning of this story becomes plan when understood within its historical context.  The ancient Jewish historian Josephus recounts that, in response to Jewish revolt, the Roman legions took the town of Gerasa in conquest in the late 60s, killed a thousand young men, held their families captive, plundered their property, and then set their homes on fire.[5]

Here is the man, symbolic of an occupied and oppressed Jewish people, cutting himself with stones, bound in fetters and chains, and living among the tombs.  How could the author of Mark portray any better what Roman imperialism and violence is doing to his people—the harm and violence and death present in that very place?  Before Jesus exorcises Legion from this person, the demon begs Jesus not to expel him from the country.  Jesus casts the demons into swine, an unclean animal, who then run off a cliff into the sea, the Jewish mythological place of primordial chaos. 

What a dangerous story to tell in first century Rome!  Who is this man that he might threaten to throw the Roman legion, the Roman military, out of the country and into the sea?  Is it any wonder that after the herd of pigs drowns themselves in the sea, the people of the village do not crown Jesus as Caesar and king, parade Jesus around town, or offer Jesus a free night’s stay at the Gerasa bed and breakfast?  Instead, the townsfolk ask Jesus to leave—presumably fearful of what will happen if the Romans catch wind of this.  The man, once occupied and oppressed by the demon, is now full of agency and wants to follow Jesus.  Jesus tells him to go tell his friends and neighbors that a liberated life is possible—is desired by God. 

Too often our demons have offered us an odd comfort.  They haunt us into believing that there is no possibility outside the status quo.  We fear what will happen when change and transformation come.  Indeed, community organizer and climate activist Anthony Rogers Wright said that what happened at the Capitol building on January 6th was not a coup but an attempt to maintain the status quo through violence.[6] 

The pandemic has been a portal, a revealing, to show those who may not have believed in the naked cruelty and violence of racism, its demonic nature, so that we now stand at a moment brimming with possibility for transformation.  That is why we see so many people afraid.  The possibility for transformation is at hand.  If we are to be healthy leaders, we must be willing to endure the pain and fear shouted by the demon so that we might all be found in our right minds as leaders of good courage. 

All of this fear and demonic spewing has been fueled by a president who told us who he was even before he took office.  My good colleague, Rabbi Sharon Brous, related the primary story of her people this past week and talked about Pharaoh.  She said that Pharaoh’s narcissism, his hunger for power, his willingness to destroy the lives of people he considered “other” that the cruel and wicked Pharaoh’s “trajectory and character hewed so closely to that of our president that shortly after the inauguration several of [her] rabbinic colleagues were told that they were not to mention the word ‘pharaoh’ because that would appear to be an implicit critique of the new President of the United States.”[7]

But he could not light the fire unless there had been an historic kindling we are so close to unseating.  So many of us as white folk are afraid that our country is being taken away from us? when violence and death are being done through demonic policies, demonic police practice, and demonic processes.  As predicted, the Black snake leaks crude and Native people die, the industrial air of Cancer Alley along the Mississippi from Baton Rouge to New Orleans continues to kill African-American folk, abandoned U.S. plants along the border leak battery acid into the lone drinking and bathing stream for people who now have rashes and lesions in Tijuana, and help me to know . . .  does Flint have clean water? 

And white folk are afraid their country is being taken away from them?  What do we call that but demonic?   Racism is killing all of us.  It is the demon we house which gives us an odd comfort while it has us in fetters and chains, cutting ourselves, living in death out among the tombs. 

Racism . . . white supremacy . . . white privilege . . . these are the unclean spirits which have haunted our country from its inception.  They deny the humanity and divinity, the fertile soil and Divine breath, the agency, freedom, and liberation that God wills for all of us.  As people of faith, we must root it out of ourselves and engage those we know to bring about transformation.  Christ is still doing exorcisms.  And we must allow him to do his work on us, our community, and our nation.  The Epiphany season is about making things manifest.  And we must transform manifest destiny to manifest empathy. 

In Toni Morrison’s Beloved, the Body of Christ was thirty women who came to Sethe’s house to drive out the demon.  Some women didn’t come because of the heat.  Some women didn’t come because they wanted to avoid the confrontation.  Ella, who knew slavery better than anyone else, got them started—mumbling, praying, singing, and hollering.  In other words, Ella knew that she did not want that demon another damn day in Sethe’s house and in her community.  The sound of the women’s collective voices, mumbling, praying, singing, and hollering were like the Clearing and Baby Suggs come to Sethe and that sound “broke over Sethe and she trembled like the baptized in its wash.”[8]  With these loving faces before her, Sethe is able to let go of the demon which is her child, destroyed by slavery and yet by her own hand, leave it behind to join this group of freed and liberated women and her community once again. 

Let the violence that happened in Washington, D.C., to maintain the status quo be the last stand of the demon of racism in our country so that all people might know themselves as Children of God and we might know ourselves, collectively, as the Body of Christ.  Peace and unity mean little in the face of the violence done by the demons of white privilege, white supremacy, and racism. 

As Rev. Dr. King preached,

 

If peace means a willingness to be exploited economically, dominated politically, humiliated and segregated, I don't want peace. If peace means being complacently adjusted to a deadening status quo, I don't want peace. If peace means keeping my mouth shut in the midst of injustice and evil, I don't want it. Peace is not simply the absence of conflict, but the existence of justice for all people.[9]

 

In the first exorcism of Mark, Jesus tells the demon to shut up, stop playing the innocent or the victim, and to come out of him.  Jesus is willing to endure the demon’s pain and screaming to show courageous leadership.  Stop acting like you are the one persecuted.  In the second exorcism, Jesus casts the demon “Legion” into pigs who then run headlong into the chaos. 

           We would do well to do the same.  We must be like Ella who have been in such solidarity that we know the pain and death brought by racism.  And we say, as she did, “Racism?  Not another damn day!  Not another damn day in our house!”  This exorcism will take all of us, our collective will, as the Body of Christ to begin mumbling, praying, singing, and hollering so that we might be baptized and found in our right minds—to know ourselves as fully the Children of God and to continue to be the Body of Christ.   Certainly, we have an odd comfort from this demon.  Even more so, there are people that we love, people that we know, that we must now engage so that this demon is driven out.  Transformation is close.   It is God’s good wish that we begin.  Cast the demon out.  Amen. 



[1] Toni Morrison, Beloved (New York:  The Penguin Group, 1987), pp. 87-88.

[2] John Dominic Crossan, The Historical Jesus:  The Life of a Mediterranean Jewish Peasant (San Francisco:  HarperCollins, 1992), quoting Paul W. Hollenbach, “Jesus, Demoniacs, and Public Authorities:  A Socio-Historical Study,” JAAR 99:567-588.

[3] Ibid, p. 315, quoting Barrie Reynolds, Magic, Divination and Witchcraft Among the Barotse of Northern Rhodesia.  Robins Series 3, Berkley and Los Angeles:  University of California Press, 1963. 

[4] Ched Myers, Binding the Strong Man:  A Political Reading of Mark’s Story of Jesus (Maryknoll, New York:  Orbis Books, 1988), p. 191.

[5] Ibid, quoting Josephus, War, IV, ix, 1.

[6] UCC Climate Justice Zoom Meeting, January 13, 2021. 

[7] Rabbi Sharon Brous, “The inflection point,” IKAR Los Angeles, January 11, 2021.

[8] Morrison, Beloved, p. 261. 

[9]Excerpt fron King's "When Peace Becomes Obnoxious" speech delivered on 18 March 1956 at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church.

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