Sirach 3:17-29
Psalm 112
Hebrews 12:18-24
Luke 14:1, 7-14
Sermon by Pastor Ronald Nelson
(filling in for Pastor Joel)
The only thing that makes me similar to Jesus, is that Jesus also liked to eat. Jesus loved banquets. We never heard that he refused the offer of a good meal. Once he was at the table, He would transform the table into a space for quick and witty comments with the people about God and life. Yes, Jesus firmly practiced “word and witness.”
While we usually operate with the idea of ‘quid pro quo,’ that is, “everything we should do should be an investment from which we can expect to reap some return.” Love for love, favours for favours, reward for our efforts, benefit for virtue. We build up our entire life, including our ego and sense of self. We keep score and feel a kind of entitlement, even before God. Think about all the time and energy people devote to keeping track of their/our personal ‘quid pro quo.’
Well, in today’s Gospel we can imagine Jesus wryly observing as people vied to position themselves for the best seat in the house.
They all wanted to be in a place of honour. You can just see him smiling as each guest preened to appear more distinguished than others. Aware of the learning capacity of his audience, Jesus first offered advice about how to avoid humiliation, “choose the lowliest place and nobody else can put you down.” Maybe a few of them actually understood his words of wisdom.
But Jesus did not stop there. The people had gathered for an ordinary Sabbath meal. Into that setting Jesus told a story about a wedding banquet. It was pretty obvious that Jesus was talking about a lot more than the evening’s dinner. Wedding banquets were one of his favourite symbols for the reign of God. A wedding celebrates something new and full of potential. It symbolizes the bonds of love and new relationships that at least in some cases can transform an entire community.
Many years ago, I remember a church just south of the Manitoba border, in Minnesota which sat out in the country and would have weddings where the people would camp on the church grounds and would celebrate all weekend. In Niagara falls, we had weddings at our regular Sunday morning worship. So in our Gospel today, Jesus addressed his fellow guests as probable hosts of future dinners, “when it is your turn, break free of that old mold that has your guest list written in stone.” He tells them to get out of the rut of having everyone in the same position, repeating well-worn conversations, with the venue being the only thing that has changed.
[My first parish was in a rural Danish community and birthdays were a big thing. You could almost go to a birthday party every day and the food would be the same, very good and very rich, and the conversations would also be the same. In 3+ years I do not remember any change. Let us be honest, a new pastor trying to make changes, even at a birthday party would not go over very well. They were great people, but as I think about it, a lack of change, maybe that is why we moved just after three years.]
In our story in the Gospel, Jesus talks about a new guest list, rather than new clothes and fancy foods. Well that surely got their attention, even if they thought he was joking. Jesus went on to suggest that they invite the most unlikely characters in the area. Yes, Jesus wanted to startle the self-impressed diners into some imaginative creativity. What if everybody at the table decided to take Jesus up on the suggestion? Instead of inviting each other to the next banquet, what if they found some eclectic group of well known but far less prestigious people to invite? What if you invited the butcher and the baker, and the candlestick maker and a homeless person or even more than one and offered them a bath and new clothes? Maybe you even send out someone to literally carry them in, and then even go so far as to invite each guest to invite another guest as well? Now imagine the unexpected table conversation! What would happen?
Maybe the guests would help the regulars feel like they have really entered into the sacrament of the table, where eating together would be a living expression of shared humanity. Now the common enjoyment of the fruits of the earth, would become a celebration of the gifts of smell and taste and beauty and a sign of common dependence on one another.
The variety of people and perspectives around the table would remind them/us that God’s creation brims with luxurious diversity,
And the enjoyment increases to the degree that all of the above is shared. After such an event, maybe when the group gathered again in a few weeks, there might be new stories about what had happened and they would forget about where they needed to sit and what food needed to be served and they would just be reliving the fun they had at the last dinner.
It is not hard to imagine Jesus then saying, “this is what it is like in the reign of God.” Pope Francis once said, “human beings are so made that they cannot live, develop and find fulfillment except in the sincere gift of self to others.” It is interesting that, after several years, governments and companies are beginning to require workers to come back to the offices. Why? Because there is value in group dynamics. Our scriptures invite us to eat and drink in the presence of others and to enter into mutually nourishing and transforming interchange. In the meantime we in the church have allowed ourselves to drift apart. Seminaries are training their pastors by internet??? And I guess I am talking myself out of a job on zoom, eh?
Going back to where I started today about eating, I really enjoy football both CFL and NFL and university but not in a stadium often filled with drunks, [sorry if I offend season ticket holders. I was one at Calgary, Hamilton, and Winnipeg but it just got too loud and rowdy.]
Now I enjoy the game at home in front of a TV. Yet for me, there is almost nothing more enjoyable than sitting around a table eating and enjoying the banter with others. When we dine out I always try to bring the servers into our conversation and inevitably they always enjoy sharing something about themselves.
Yes, Jesus and Francis offered us to be on an adventure. Francis went on to say, “life, for all its confrontations, is the art of an encounter.” No, it is not “the art of a deal.” We, as people should be passionate , as meeting others, seeking points of contact, building bridges and planning projects that include others. Francis also said, “this could be our aspiration and style of life.” Jesus called it, “the Resurrection.”
Sometimes we think the whole idea of loving one another just started with Jesus. But we ignore the Hebrew scriptures at our peril. Five hundred years before the Christian scriptures we had the Torah, “scriptures’ first five books” And then other books like Sirach that we heard today, humility, wisdom, and alms giving were always playing a part in the story.
And then the letters like Hebrews came along and said we can actually touch God in the ordinary events of our lives. Yes, when we put these ideas together we find ‘the Resurrection,’ we find ‘Metanoia.’ When we do not do that, then we are like what Paul said in Corinthians, “we are going through life, as the most ridiculous of all people.” Yes, many of us are going through life without hearing the music which gives meaning to life.
Let us go now to the banquet,
To the feast of the universe.
The table is set and a place is waiting,
Come, everyone,
With your gifts to share.
I will rise in the early morning,
The community’s waiting for me
With a spring in my step
I’m walking with my friends and family.
God invites all the poor and hungry
To the banquet of justice and good
Where the harvest will not be hoarded
So that no one will lack for food.
May we build such a place among us
Where all people are equal in love.
God has called us to work together
And to share everything we have.
Let us go now to the banquet,
To the feast of the universe.
The table is set and a place is waiting,
Come, everyone,
With your gifts to share.
[ELW 523]
Gracious God, we pray for the awareness to be ever alert to those in need. Grant us the humility to put their needs before our own, and to be willing to serve them with our whole being. All of the above sounds easier than it is, which is why we are still talking about it. Amen.