Earth Day

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Sermon: B Lent 3/Amistad Sunday, March 7, 2021, How long? Not long!

 B Lent 3 UCB 2012
Psalm 107 (OL for Amistad Sunday/BLent4 Scripture)
March 7, 2021 

              When I was in seminary, I regularly lampooned and directed sarcasm at the Bible, suggested that its moral authority meant little to me as a Christian.  I found very little eternal meaning in its pages.

           In the dreaded Middler Orals at Eden Theological Seminary, the seminary student is brought before a panel of three faculty members and quizzed and questioned on every theological issue under the sun.  One of the professors on my panel knew of my disdain for Scripture and sought to bring that forward for the other two faculty members to see.  By that time in seminary, I had decided I was not going to die in a ditch created for me by someone else.  At the time, my seminary was at war with itself, and too often seminary professors took out the differences of opinion they had with each other out on the students.   

           And I was changing in seminary.  I had one of the most gifted New Testament professors, the foremost Gospel of Thomas scholar in the world, who taught us the basics, encouraged critical insight, did not allow us to be lazy with politically opportune translations, and someone who sparkled when we investigated the text.  Like Steve, I began to delight in the work required to do Biblical investigation and find its meaning.  But during Middler Orals, I certainly was not going to display the transition I was going through, believing that would have conveyed theological weakness to at least one of my professors who wanted my Biblical certainty. 

           And Steve, my New Testament Professor, helped me even further when I would call him about a particular text for a sermon—usually late on a Saturday night!  Here I was, calling my New Testament professor out of the blue, and he was taking the time with me to look at the Scripture.  It was like going through a mini-class of Biblical CSI.  I would hear Steve working through his analysis over the phone, looking at the Scripture through four different angles, and delighting in a new perspective or understanding he had found right in that moment.   This was usually followed by me saying, “How am I supposed to preach THAT?”  And Steve would respond, with a smile in his voice, “Mike, my friend, that’s why they pay you the big money!”

           I retained my critical eye for Scripture, but I began to see real life truths that emerged from ancient stories and mythologies.  I began to see Biblical authors working the tradition—passing it on, repeating it to remind people that the story could be heard echoing into a new time, reshaping it and reformulating it for their day.  I saw a deep tradition beginning to reveal itself to me. 

One of those deep, deep stories had to do with the prophets, the truth tellers to power.  Something courageous within the heart of prophets placed them as intermediaries between God and the people. 

The prophets experienced the pain and suffering of God in a very real way.   I think I too often forget to relate that to you as a congregation, but relating the heart of God is done so well by the Biblical prophets.  God’s heart is full of revelry and joy when people live in right relationship with one another.  The prophets relate that God delights in us.  Like a small child, God is gleefully clapping hands, making music, and singing along.  At the same time, when God witnesses us taking advantage of the most vulnerable, the prophets share that God moans and grieves, openly weeping.  God’s heart is broken.  Almost like a young lover who sees her sweetheart in the arms of another, God feels jilted and scorned by such behavior.   So the prophet is given the job of relating God’s busting-at-the-seams joy with the people.  Or God’s disappointment, sorrow, and anger to challenge people in power—to communicate God’s joy or pain.

But the prophet also, as intermediary, must relate the pain of the people to God.  The people wonder, “Is God listening?  Does God care?  Where is God?  Why is God not present when God promised?  Why must our people suffer?  Why must our people go on living in such pain?”  And the prophet is, at first, when called to respond to the pain of the people by God, somewhat reluctant.  But when immersed in the struggle, feeling the pain the people feel, and wondering whether God’s character is to be believed, the prophet snaps, and begins to ask the perennial question:  “How long, O God, how long?  How long must your people suffer in pain and degradation?  How long must they go about suffering the stinging blows of their oppressors?  How long must they live in slavery, prison, and torture while you sit idly by, O God?  Where is your providence and care for us now, O God?  You promised.  And we see no evidence that you are active, alive, and up from your slumber, keeping your promises.  How long, O God, how long?”  The prophet first wants to know if God is woke.

Finally, returning from a God who listens, attends to, and answers prayer, the prophet communicates God’s hope against hope in the midst of despair.  The prophet seeing with God’s eyes has more clarity than most, and envisions the coming new day.    The prophet returns from prayer newly aware how they and their people are responsible for joining together with God in making a new creation.  And so the prophet begins to describe the contours of the new creation so that the vivid detail might goad us into collaborating with God to bring it about.  The prophet communicates that God is active and ready to act as God has done of old. 

March 25, 1965, Montgomery, Alabama.

 

I come to say to you this afternoon, however difficult the moment, however frustrating the hour, it will not be long,  Because "truth crushed to earth will rise again."

 

How long? Not long, because "no lie can live forever."

How long? Not long, because "you shall reap what you sow."

How long? Not long:

Truth forever on the scaffold,

Wrong forever on the throne,

Yet that scaffold sways the future,

And, behind the dim unknown,

Standeth God within the shadow,

Keeping watch above God’s own.

 

How long? Not long, because the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.

How long? Not long,  because:

Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord; God is trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored;

God has loosed the fateful lightning of his terrible swift sword;

God’s truth is marching on.

 

God has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat;

God is sifting out the hearts of all before the judgment seat.

O, be swift, my soul, to answer God! Be jubilant my feet!

Our God is marching on.

Glory, hallelujah!  Glory, hallelujah!

Glory, hallelujah! Glory, hallelujah!

God’s truth is marching on.[1]

 

The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice.  This quote from Dr. King is the sentiment expressed in our psalm for today.   But . . . we acknowledge, as Ta-Nehisi Coates said, the arc did not bend for so many of the people enslaved on the Middle Passage, African-American communities segregated, lynched, or set on fire, Trayvon Martin, or Tamir Rice, or Sandra Bland, Breonna Taylor, or George Foster.   

It was Ibrahim X. Kendi, the director of the Boston University Center for Antiracist Research, where he’s the Andrew W. Mellon professor in the humanities, who, in remembering the longer arc of history, reminded us that when African American people have exercised their right to vote, have exercised their right to hold office, or have exercised their right to be free, they have experienced a consistent push back of white supremacist mob violence over the course of 400 years.   Professor Kendi points to what the super wealthy have done to all of us—the disinheritance they have created, the pressure they have put on our economic system to be like rats racing around for the fewer and fewer resources.   And many of us white folk who have suffered, even more so during pandemic, had their anger educated that the source of their suffering was not corporate elites but those Latinx invaders, those Black anarchists, or even antifa protesting in Portland.  You didn’t lose an election, they were educated to believe, you had it stolen from you by African American voters in Atlanta, and Philadelphia, and Detroit.  When that is repeated and hammered day after day, why wouldn’t they believe it?  Professor Kendi asked in referencing the capitol insurrection “What did you think they were going to do?”[2]

As people of faith in a largely white church, we must take up the task of confrontational education and protest so that the white supremacy abounding in this country is met and stemmed by an other-hearted people who remember the courage of their faith ancestors and hold the purveyors of violence accountable and will not stop until all God’s children see themselves as sisters and brothers, siblings and cousins.  We must rise to that task

Dr. King and that Psalmnist are not about optimism.  They are about a hope against hope.  There is no evidence but for God’s character that a people ground in suffering is not God’s plan and purpose.   Psalm 107 reminds us that God’s purposes are being worked out.  God is active and moving.  Providence is knowing that God is active and moving on our behalf, particularly as we found ourselves enslaved, broken, or economically destitute.

But hear these words very carefully.  They are not spoken from a place of power and privilege.  For when these same words are spoken from places of power and privilege, they become justification for genocide and slaughter.  God does not trample out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored to declare supremacy for one people over another.  No!  That wrath is to rightfully restore those who have had their own humanity taken from them, left broken and hurting along the road of life, so that they might know God is their advocate to restore and redeem them to human community.

That it is not in God’s character to leave us in desolate places, hungry and thirsting.  So where we see people redeemed from such troubles in the world, we know that God is at work. 

Even those who end up in prison and hard labor from their own actions and rebellion against God, when they cried to God, it was not in God’s character to leave them in chains and behind bars.  Where we see people freed from their chains and brought forth into the light of day, we know enough to say that God is at work.  

Some people are caught in their own sinful ways and find themselves caught up in destructive ways of being and close to death’s door, and they wake up from their nightmare and call to God, and it is in God’s character to forgive and heal.  So where we see people delivered from their own paths of self-destruction and healed, we know for certain to say God is at work. 

Repeating over and over again, as a mantra, Psalm 107 tells us that where the oppressed are liberated, the hungry are filled, creation is renewed, the needy raised up, and the politically powerful brought low, God’s purposes are being worked out.  It is not so much that God does these things through His power but rather through Her persistence and endurance, acting in love along that long moral arc so that right relationships are built in our personal lives, in our families, in our schools, in our community institutions, in the systems and structures of our government, and throughout our world. 

It is in the nature of God’s character, that God’s providence is found in His persistence and not in Her power.    That is the claim of Psalm 107, that God wills and wants our liberation from anything that would destroy us, even if what would destroy us is self-inflicted, so that we might experience joy. 

Can we possibly hear the good news that God wills and wants and works hard at delivering us from what would enslave us from the outside and what would enslave us from the inside as well?

This is what those Congregationalists believed, one of the historical denominations that came together to form our beloved United Church of Christ, against all odds, when slavery was still the norm in our country and a group of would-be-slaves revolted, took over the ship, La Amistad, and turned the ship back toward Africa during the day.  At night, the Cubans who had formerly been steering the ship, reversed course until the zigzagging ship landed in Long Island.  The Africans were jailed and charged with piracy and murder.    Congregationalist Lewis Tappan headed up the Amistad Committee, that was the precursor to our present-day United Church of Christ Global Ministries Board.   It is the courageous history in Jackson of abolitionist papers like the American Freeman and the Sentinel and Jackson’s history in the Underground Railroad.

In God’s great providence, not in power over, but in persistence and endurance, this church has been part of the long moral arc that bends toward justice.  

And I think that continues to be.  That Biblical story I have come to love so well, the prophet who cries to God, “How long, O God, how long?” is repeated in age after age.  Let us as a church in matters of justice, continue to join with those in our local community and throughout our world, to say for another year, “How long?  Not long.” for we know God’s providence and purpose are being worked out through St. John’s United Church of Christ.   We communicate through our many and varied ministries and missions that the arc of the moral universe is long and that we believe God intends joy for the people in our church community, for those in Jackson, in Michigan, and for all of God’s creation.  How long?  Not long. 

The Bible teaches that persistently and with endurance, God’s Truth is marching on.  And we are marching in the light of that same God.  Glory.  Hallelujah.  Glory!  Hallelujah!  And thanks be to God.  Amen.



[1] http://www.mlkonline.net/ourgod.html .  I have edited the speech to make language for the speech divinity gender neutral and language for humanity inclusive and expansive.  lThe video of this portion of Dr. King’s speech can be found at:  www.youtube.com/watch?v=TAYITODNvlM 

[2] “Ibram X. Kendi & Keisha Blain on Impeachment, White Supremacist Violence & Holding Trump Accountable,” Democracy Now!  February 10, 2021, https://www.democracynow.org/2021/2/10/ibram_x_kendi_keisha_blain_impeachment,

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