Earth Day

Thursday, July 29, 2021

Sermon, 17th Sunday in Ordinary Time, July 25, 2021, "Step into the arena"

 

 B Proper 12 17 Ord Pilg 2021
2 Samuel 11:1-17; 12:1-7a
July 25, 2021

           Yesterday Tracy and I travelled to Chicago to have lunch with our youngest son who was at the new regional headquarters of Team Rubicon, an organization that coordinates disaster relief all over the world.  Abe was there to coordinate a medical team headed for Mongolia which has been overrun with Co-Vid.  Heading up that team was the Director of Emergency Services from Johns Hopkins Medicine.

Abe gave us a tour of Team Rubicon’s Chicago facility, a converted fire station just outside of downtown Chicago.  They had kept some of the original brick and mortar, fire hoses, and, of course, a fire pole.  But on the wall, as you entered Team Rubicon’s Chicago headquarters was their mission statement.  Listed first was a quote from a speech by Teddy Roosevelt, “Step into the arena.”[1]  Roosevelt was saying that we should not be bystanders as need shows itself and disaster strikes. 

It is not to be perfect or right.  Abe shared how Team Rubicon had too often been part of colonialist mindset that it was trying to correct.  This medical team was not going in to tell Mongolian health care how to do its job.  Rather, they were there to ally themselves with the health care system as intermediaries who would give relief for three weeks to people who were exhausted in the second tier of care.  The people working on the front lines in Mongolia would be in charge of care.  Team Rubicon had made mistakes and learned and continues to step into the arena.  There is no effort without error and shortcoming.  But there is no failure.  Failure is only data for the next effort.[2]

As Christians, we step into the arena not with skinned knuckles but with skinned knees from having bent to care for the sick and the dying, with sweat, dirt, and blood from travelling to the margins to care for those outside the circles of life, and with a willingness to be transformed ourselves.   As people of faith, we know that God has already stepped into the arena and extends a hand toward us to join and be part of the struggle. 

It was Rev. Leslie Penrose, a professor of Tracy’s at Phillips Theological Seminary, who had learned about base communities on a mission trip to Nicaragua in the 1980s and had returned to the States with that experience and knowledge of how to step into the struggle.  Penrose had met a man in Nicaragua who was a gay person but could not enter the ministry because of his sexual orientation.  His story raised so many questions for her that Penrose returned to the States and enrolled in seminary seeking answers.  A semester into her seminary studies, a nurse asked her if she would be willing to minister to a young man dying of AIDS who was scared and alone.  “Don’t even bother,” he said, “my church has already told me I am going to hell.”  After visiting him almost every day until he died and holding a memorial service for him at his friends’ request, Penrose recounts that things just exploded.  She was asked to do chaplaincy for HIV/AIDS patients—talking to them, baptizing them, making hospital visits.   Nobody else seemed to be doing this ministry in the Tulsa area.   And pretty soon members of the gay community began attending Memorial Drive United Methodist Church where she was Associate Pastor.  But the church got threatened as they filled a whole row.

She later founded Community of Hope in a basement and the congregation slowly grew but had to figure out a way that included hospital beds to people struggling with HIV/AIDS could be a part of the worship. 

“Across the years, we learned pretty quickly how to do liturgy that would help us survive every time we came to church, having somebody else die — that kind of just massive overwhelming grief that was happening in the early ’90s,” Penrose said.  But they were willing to step into the arena, join hands with God whose hand had been extended waiting for someone, anyone to bend their knee.

Community of Hope eventually became known as a church that welcomed many other people who were not welcome at other churches.  But they were also brought up on charges by a United Methodist clergy colleagues.  That is how Community of Hope began as part of the United Church of Christ. Penrose,  “I wrote a letter and said, ‘You know, I’m tired of wasting time and energy and creative thought fighting when we could be putting that into some wholesome kind of ministry.”[3]  When we step into the arena, it is not all rainbows and butterflies.

 Traditionally, at least as I remember the tradition taught to me, King David was the greatest of Jewish heroes and kings.  He arose from humble origins, was anointed as a king as a young boy, slayed the giant Goliath with his sling to “head off” the Philistines, chosen to be king by the prophet as just a boy,  forced into exile by a king gone mad, referenced as a man of God’s own heart, and returned from exile to rightfully claim the throne, moving the center of Israelite power to Jerusalem, taking Israel to its status as the world’s number one superpower.  As a way of asserting Jesus’s authority, two of the Gospel writers traced Jesus’s lineage back through David.  Indeed, Jesus was even born in what became known as the city of David, Bethlehem, and Jesus is named as the Son of David.  Even in popular culture, I think we know enough of the David story that Disney used parts of it to frame the popular movie and Broadway show, The Lion King.

           David is supposed to be a man after God’s own heart—a man of justice, mercy, integrity, and compassion. The Israelite monarchy, in its most devotional form, was supposed to represent God’s rule on earth.  Earlier in this sermon series, I had us read Psalm 72, thought to be a coronation or inauguration Psalm proclaimed as a new king takes leadership.  That Psalm is juxtaposed with I Samuel 8 where God warns the people that all the king will do is “take away.”  Psalm 72 reads

“Give the king your justice, O God.  May the king judge your people with righteousness and your poor with justice.  May the king defend the cause of the poor of the people, give deliverance to the needy, and crush the oppressor.  For the king delivers the needy when they call, the poor and those who have no helper.  From oppression and violence, the king redeems their life and precious is their blood in the king’s sight.”[4]

 

This juxtaposition between values and a warning over and against romantic memory of authoritarian power and innocence requires our engagement with our faith, our Socratic questioning, our interrogation.  Does a nation lose its soul when its values are sacrificed at the altar of romantic memory?  When we cannot interrogate our past to call for a future with more integrity, do we always end up with empty sayings like, “We are the chosen.  God blesses us,” that forego our obligation and our responsibility?

           Israel’s birth story was about a people in slavery who were delivered from authoritarian rule—genocide, torture, and death.  This birth remembered was to make them especially aware of the stranger or the immigrant in their communities as they had been the stranger or the immigrants in Egypt.  As David’s star ascends in the ancient Near East, however, are values and warning traded for a romantic view of “power over” other nations believing in Israel and therefore King David’s exceptionalism?   Is David without obligation and responsibility?

           The story read for us from 2 Samuel today begins with an ominous foreshadowing:  “In the spring of the year, the time when kings go out to battle . . .” Where is David?  He has stayed home at the palace.  And where 1 Samuel 8 had God reminding the people of what a king will do by repeating the words “take away,” we learn that authoritarian power rarely gets its own hands dirty.  It sends other people to do the dirty work.  Remember 1 Samuel 8? The king will take away your children to serve in the army, the king will take away your land and fields and make you farm it.  The king will take away your best resources and make them do his work.  The king will take away. 

           The story before us today is cast using military language.  Eleven times in the story the word “send” is used and it is almost exclusively used for the behavior of King David.  In this story, David does not do anything face to face.  He has other people do his bidding—knowing that others will keep the chain of command.  David is the master manipulator—moving people around like chess pieces, like kings, military dictators do.[5]

           David is sending out his troops without going himself.  He sends for Bathsheba without going to her himself.  He sends for Uriah.  He sends out Uriah.  He sends a message to his military general, Joab.  He cuts the connections between himself and his behavior.  It is like the movie “Wag the Dog” where the president tries to use a war in another country to avoid his own responsibility.  It is like when President Clinton bombed two countries to avoid his behavior with Monica Lewinsky.  The abusive use of power and violence at a national level is meant to distract us from the abusive use of power at a personal level.  We may question the king but we don’t dare question the country.

           David rapes Bathsheba and continues his sending.  She sends word she is pregnant.  He sends for Uriah, the Hittite, her husband, a foreigner in the land, one who is also poor[6],  a person for whom David is to be an advocate, a protector, a deliverer.  If David does not do so, Israel is not Israel.  Israel is Egypt and David is the Pharaoh.  But the prophetic warning sounded by the Living God through Samuel has come to fruition. 

           David sends Uriah to his home to have sex with his wife to cover up David’s crime.  Uriah remembers his connections to his comrades in arms, the ark of the covenant (a reminder of God’s deliverance from authoritarian rule in Egypt), and Uriah will not go home while his mates are not home.  David sends for Uriah again.  This time David liquors him up and sends him to his house again.  Uriah refuses to step foot in his home.  So David sends Uriah back to war, a war he will opt out of himself, with a message for his field general Joab, “When the fighting is fierce and the chips are down, have Uriah sent to the front lines.” 

           There Uriah is killed.  Joab sends word back to David that Uriah, David’s servant, has died in battle.  And in the final act of unmitigated evil, David sends word back to Joab, absolving Joab of responsibility, saying, “Don’t worry, my friend, this is the nature of war.  People get killed.”

           Bathsheba mourns the death of her husband, Uriah, which literally means, “The Living God is my light.”  Indeed, throughout the story, it is Uriah the Hittite who acts as the faithful Jew.  And when the appointed mourning time is over, David sends for Bathsheba—to take her as one of his many wives.

           On its face, this story reminds us when we wax romantic about benevolent dictators, authoritarian rulers we paint as saviors, that there are no such things.  Absolute power corrupts absolutely.  Empires consume.  Kingdoms take.  Rather than get their own hands dirty, authoritarian rulers send. 

           And King David would have gotten away with it too but for the prophet Nathan appearing before him to offer a blistering critique of authoritarian rule through allegory.  Chapter 11 ends with the words, “But the thing David had done displeased the Living God.”  God hears the blood of Uriah calling out and extends a hand to the prophet Nathan.  Nathan steps into the arena. 

So it is now that the Living God sends Nathan to confront King David.  Nathan relates the poverty of Uriah the Hittite by describing him as a poor man.  King David sees the injustice in the story and pronounces judgment on the man who would take the little that Uriah has.  Nathan now uses King David’s own sense of justice to say to him, “You are that man!  The violence and unfaithfulness you have done now pervades your whole family, palace, and the nation.  You cannot get away from it.”

           This is our story.  This is our tradition.  This is . . . Bible.  This story valorizes the foreigner, the immigrant, the poor and paints Uriah as the faithful Jew.  This tradition declares a blistering critique over the most romantically held king within the Jewish and Christian faith—King David.  The prophet Nathan speaks truth to power and, once again, shares the values of a God who does not allow the most powerful person of the world’s number one superpower to escape accountability for his treatment of the vulnerable, his theft of the poor, and his hypocrisy when David is said to be a man after God’s own heart.  Nathan, risking life and limb, comes before David and tells him to get right. 

           If our faith is to mean anything, we should tell a story like this one to our friends, our neighbors, and our family members who do not believe social justice is central to the Jewish and Christian story and tradition.  As the satirist Jon Stewart was given to say, “If you don't stick to your values when they're being tested, they're not values: they're hobbies.” 

           Once we have evangelized the people we know, we, as a church, need to remind ourselves of the courage our faith calls for to confront the powerful with God’s call for integrity, justice, and treasuring of the most vulnerable among us.  God does not suggest or hint that the most powerful and wealthy are virtuous because they are powerful and wealthy.  In fact, the Bible, through stories like these, suggests that if you are powerful and wealthy, you fall under the eye of God’s suspicion.  As a church, where will we, in full courage, call the powerful and wealthy into account to bring about transformative justice?  How will we fully participate in this story so that it is once again told in our lives?

           For some people, the authoritarian dictator can do no wrong.  For people of faith, the authoritarian dictator, even the most beloved in history, will be confronted in courage to bring about God’s justice.  Let us begin.  Let us step into the arena.  For God has heard the cry and stepped into the arena and now extends a hand hoping we will take that hand in love and courage.  Amen.

          

          

 



[1] Erin McCarthy, “Roosevelt’s ‘The Man in the Arena,’” Mental Floss, April 23, 2020, https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/63389/roosevelts-man-arena.

[2] One of my favorite organizing principles learned from Adrienne Maree Brown.

[3] Emily McFarlan Miller, “UMC edges toward historic split over LGBTQ inclusion. This small church showed the way,” Episcopal News Service, July 23, 2021.  https://www.episcopalnewsservice.org/2021/07/23/umc-edges-toward-historic-split-over-lgbtq-inclusion-this-small-church-showed-the-way/

[4] Psalm 72:1-2,4, 12, 14.

[5] Everett Fox, Give Us a King:  Samuel, Saul, and David, (New York:  Schocken Books, 1999),  pp. 188-189.

[6] Hints of how poor Uriah is are indicated by Nathan describing Uriah as having only one sheep to David’s money.  Unfortunately, even the prophet Nathan regards Bathsheba as chattel.

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