Chetwynd Shared Ministry
November 5, 2017 (All Saints Sunday)
Scripture: Matthew 5:1-12
Blessed are the rich,
for they will become richer.
Blessed are the
emotionally numb, for nothing will disturb them.
Blessed are those with
bombs and nuclear codes, for they will inherit the earth.
Blessed are those with
enough food, for they can afford to give away the crumbs from their tables.
Blessed are those with
privilege, for they will decide what is right and what is wrong.
Blessed are those in
the comfortable pews, for they can feel smug about their virtue.
Blessed are the
bullies, for they can control the actions of others.
(pause)
OK – so maybe Jesus
didn’t say it quite like this. But if
you look at the way that our world works, what Jesus is saying in today’s
reading from Matthew doesn’t make any sense.
If you look at the way that our world works, it usually isn’t the meek
person who is given power, who inherits the earth. If you look at the way that our world works,
those who hunger and thirst for righteousness usually don’t get to see the fulfillment
of their hunger. If you look at the way
that our world works, the poor in spirit, the merciful, the pure in heart, and
the peacemakers aren’t usually the people who are exalted, the people who are
respected, the people who are celebrated.
In fact it’s often the opposite.
Usually it is the people who hold the power, the people who are rich, the
people who are beautiful, the people who come from the “right family” – these
are the people that our world celebrates.
So what does Jesus
mean when he calls the poor in spirit, those who mourn, the meek, those who
hunger and thirst for righteousness, the merciful, the pure in heart, the
peacemakers – what does Jesus mean when he calls them blessed?
Think about what the
world means when it says blessed.
Someone brings supper over to you – “blessed.” There is good weather for walking your dog –
“blessed.” You get to sleep in for an extra hour in the
morning (though not in this region!) – “blessed.”
This is how we
normally understand the word “blessed”.
It describes good things happening in life. Any sports fans here this morning? I hear that there’s going to be a big
football game in three weeks. I wonder
which players are going to call themselves “blessed” in the post-game
interviews. I’m guessing that it’s not
going to be the losing team.
And yet Jesus isn’t
saying, “blessed are the winners of football games.” Jesus isn’t saying, “blessed are the
materially fortunate.” Jesus isn’t
saying, “blessed are those with an abundance of food.”
Thinking about all of
this, I wonder what was actually meant by that word, “blessed.” Last winter, I did a bit of work on this
passage from Matthew’s gospel – what we sometimes call The Beatitudes. I wanted to look up what was meant by the
original Greek word used in Matthew’s gospel – surely it didn’t have the same
meaning as what we think of as “blessed.”
In the school library we had a great big 12-volume “Theological
Dictionary of the New Testament” – the volumes are so huge that this dictionary
has a table to itself in the library. I
looked up this word, “makarioi,” that
Matthew uses to see what else it might mean besides blessed.
When I found the right
volume and opened it up, it fell open right to the word I was looking for –
telling me that I wasn’t the first person at the school to wonder what Jesus
meant by “blessed.”
At first it wasn’t too
helpful. It told me that “makarioi” meant blessed or happy. It told me that it meant, and I quote here,
“the transcendent happiness of a life beyond care, labour, and death.” It told me, not very helpfully, that in the
New Testament, it was a word usually used to express a beatitude. But then it started to get more
interesting. To be blessed, in this
sense, is to see the present in light of the future. To see the present in light of the
future. It implies tension between the
state of the present and the state of the future. The dictionary called it a “sacred paradox.” (Wednesday night bible study folks – you
might recognize this concept from our conversation last Wednesday.)
And I think that this
is the key to understanding the blessings of the beatitudes. Even though the poor in spirit, those who
mourn, the meek, those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, the merciful,
the pure in heart, the peacemakers, and those who are persecuted for
righteousness’ sake – even though they don’t appear to be very blessed in
Jesus’ time or in our time, in God’s coming kingdom they will be blessed. They will receive the joy, the blessing, the
transcendent happiness that comes from being fully present with God.
These beatitudes, the
opening verses of chapter 5 of Matthew’s gospel, are the opening words of
Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount. In Matthew’s
gospel, this is Jesus’ first public discourse, his first public teaching that
is recorded by Matthew. Essentially, we
are hearing the opening words to Jesus’ first sermon.
And Jesus uses the
opening words of his first sermon to proclaim a vision for the world that is
radically different than the world that we see around us. Jesus is proclaiming the kingdom of heaven,
the kingdom of God where the power structures aren’t just re-arranged but are
completely turned upside down. Jesus is
proclaiming a world where the poor in spirit are blessed; a world where those who mourn are blessed; a world where the meek are blessed; a world where the pure in heart are blessed; a world where the peacemakers are blessed.
So what does this mean
for us? After all, we are living in a
world that blesses the rich, the powerful, the privileged. (quiet voice)
But the thing is, we are an Easter people. We know that the world doesn’t get the final
word. We know that even when God dies on
a cross and it seems as though the world has won, we know that the story
doesn’t end on Friday. We know that two
days later, we will be celebrating the empty tomb, and God’s final word of joy
and hope.
And because we know
this, we can trust in the beatitudes. We
can trust that God’s kingdom will have the final word over the powers and
principalities of this world.
Today, we are recognizing
All Saints Day, which falls on November 1 each year. On this day, we remember all of God’s saints
who came before us in the world. This
includes saints whose names might be well known to us, like St. Theresa of
Avila, St. Augustine, St. Peter, or Mother Theresa. But it also includes all of God’s people in
all generations – everyone who walked this road of faith before us. People whose names may have only been known to
those who loved them, and people whose names have been lost to the passage of
time.
These are all of the
saints who have gone ahead of us, who trusted the Easter message, who have
caught glimpses of God’s coming kingdom.
The letter to the
Hebrews tells us that we are surrounded by “so great a cloud of witnesses” and
that we don’t travel this journey of faith alone. There have been thousands and millions of
saints who have made this journey before us.
There are thousands and millions of saints around the world who are
making this journey with us. We never
need to be discouraged because we are never alone. Not only has God been our constant companion
since before we took our first breath; but our fellow saints are also always
with us.
When I think about All
Saints Day, I think about my Grandma.
She was born on a farm in south-western Ontario. She was born in 1916 in a Methodist family,
and when the United Church of Canada was formed and her family joined, she was
9 years old. Church was always an
important part of Grandma’s life, right up until she died. She also loved school and studying, and
dreamed of going to university; but never had an opportunity to do so. She married a farmer and raised three
children, and imparted a love of reading and learning in all of them. She had 8 grandchildren who all inherited her
love of reading, and all of us had the opportunity to go to university. If she were alive today, she would now have
17 ½ great grandchildren.
She loved her family
and she loved reading and learning. But
towards the end of her life, she became blind, as well as paralyzed from, as
she described it, her “armpits down.”
She lived the last year of her life in the long term care wing of her
local hospital. But she never lost her
gentleness and her love and her sense of humour. Her children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren
would visit her at the hospital; and if one of the nurses was having a bad day,
they would go spend a bit of time in Grandma’s room, and leave there ready to
face whatever else their day might hold.
When I think of God’s
saints, and the great cloud of witness who surround us, I think first of my
Grandma. To me, she embodied the
beatitudes that Jesus talked about. She
didn’t always have an easy life, and from the perspective of the world, she
wasn’t showered with material blessings.
But even when times were difficult, she lived out these upside-down
blessings of Jesus. She saw the world,
not through the hardships that she faced; but instead, like that definition I
mentioned earlier, she saw the present in light of the future. She was blessed. I pray that I might be able to live my life
with just a fraction of the grace with which my Grandma lived.
I want to take a
minute, this All Saints Sunday, to remember the saints who have been important
in each of our lives. All of us have had
mentors in our faith – people who have taught us, people who have inspired us,
people who have influenced us, people who have led us. This might include people who we have met and
known well, or it might be people who have inspired us through their words or
their actions or their writings. We give
thanks for all the saints.
At this time, I invite
you to take the red heart from your bulletin and write on it the names of God’s
saints that you want to remember and give thanks for today. These might include the names of people you
knew well or the names of people you never met.
These might include the names of people who have died, or the names of
people who are still living. I invite
you to write the names of the saints for whom you give thanks, and when you are
ready, I invite you to come forwards and place the names in this basket, and
offer your thanksgiving here at the alter.
(people write and
bring forward names)
Let us pray:
God of all times and
all places,
today, we offer thanks
for all the saints,
for the saints who have been named
here this morning,
for the saints who have mentored us
in our faith,
for the saints who are well known,
and for the saints whose names are
known only to you.
We give thanks for
women and men of faith
who have gone before us,
who have led us,
who have walked with us on our
journey.
We give thanks that we
are part of the Communion of Saints,
and surrounded by a great cloud of
witness
who have walked this road before us.
Help us to always
travel this path of faith,
trusting in your promise of
blessing,
We pray this in the
name of Jesus Christ,
the author and perfecter of our
faith.
Amen.
(Grandma with three of her grandchildren, circa 2001)
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