Proper9C, Sullivan Park Care Center, July 7, 2013 by Annette
Fricke
There are no parallels in the other gospels. There is nowhere else in the New Testament with
the exception that this story is a mirror image of the story where Jesus sends
out his twelve disciples on a mission in Luke 9, a story that is found also in Matthew
and Mark. So why does Luke tell this particular story? I
think we get a hint in Luke chapter 3, where Luke quotes Isaiah saying,
“Prepare the way of the Lord.” Although
we may recognize that this is in reference to the vocation of John the Baptist,
isn’t that also the purpose of the angels, the prophets, the twelve disciples
and the seventy-some?
In order to
structure humanity’s daily living as well as the games or sports we play, we
usually discipline ourselves with a set of rules. We do this in order that within the structures of society, we can lead
a peaceful co-existence. Several years ago, I took a class on Geoffrey Chaucer’s
Canterbury Tales. It is the story of a
pub owner who creatively seeks a way to drum up business. He has a brew or two with current patrons of another
such establishment, all of whom are on a pilgrimage to the shrine of St. Thomas
Becket. This is the rule: He decides that each of his fellow travelers will
tell stories both to and from the shrine and whoever tells the best story, in
his estimation, will receive a free meal at his pub, courtesy of the other
travelers. The idea of traveling with
others in this poetic story is to provide companionship and entertainment to
pass the time since they are on foot. Traveling together protected them from outlaws. But also, this group is focused on their
journey to the shrine. They
are going to the most popular shrine in England. When Becket was murdered local
people managed to obtain pieces of cloth soaked in his blood. Rumors soon
spread that, when touched by this cloth, people were cured of blindness,
epilepsy and leprosy. It was not long before the monks at Canterbury Cathedral
were selling small glass bottles of Becket's blood to visiting pilgrims. As with any such group of people, they are a sundry lot as they
go their way. It appears to be a very accurate study of people who are characteristic
of those who lived as contemporaries of Chaucer himself.
I see this same phenomenon in my own life. Everywhere I have been there is this variety
of people; they are on
the committees, in the parishes, in the families, in the workplaces, in the
skilled nursing facilities. We are all
seekers of healing in our lives. Some of
us seek that through God and others through other means. Some see it through
the healing medicines and some by the comforting words of nurses or aids. And
yet, there is always a challenge for all of us to get along with each other everywhere
we go, because all of us are different people with dissimilar personalities and
diverse ways of doing things. This even extends to the minutest details of how
to make a bed, wash and fold the laundry, or set the table. Some think it
should be one way and others another. Sometimes it becomes a matter of wanting
a particular person to do a specific task because, simply speaking, that is the
way a certain person wants it done.
In Luke 10,
we have a bare bones formula for how to go about on a mission trip preparing
the way of the Lord. It is all
business. They are to ask God for
laborers for the harvest. They are to
venture out in twos. They are warned that this will not be an easy task. They
are to pack lightly and not stop to greet anyone. They are to go with an
attitude of peace and seek to stay where their peace is appreciated and
understood. They are expected to eat whatever is placed before them. They will
be among people who follow different food rituals than that prescribed by
kosher law. They are to cure the sick and say that the kingdom of God has come
near to you. Unlike Luke 9, it is not about the mission of the twelve
disciples, the so-called inner circle of Jesus.
It is about the others who have also believed in Jesus. Seventy or seventy-two represents the working
of the Holy Spirit. It is a mirror of
the passage about Moses in Numbers. It
also is a number that represents all nations.
Therefore, it is a passage that means we also, empowered by the Holy
Spirit, are to go on that same mission into the world to teach, preach, and
heal as Jesus did because that is what it means to prepare the way of Jesus. Some
will look at this text and say to themselves, “Oh no. Not me.
This applies to the clergy. I am
just a lay person.” But if we count
ourselves out, how will the gospel be spread?
No; this applies to lay people, too. And we also will be as surprised as the first
disciples were as to what happens when we share the gospel.
Of course,
this is not the only way to go about spreading the gospel. Even without this rigid structure, we each are
called to do this in our daily lives at work and wherever we spend our
time. Despite the fact that there are
many out there who do not believe in God at all or only marginally, there are
ears out there that are receptive to the gospel. I remember attending a social function in the
church social hall, conversing with the visitation pastor a couple days after I
preached a sermon and the church secretary approached me, tapping me on my left
shoulder, asking for permission to quote part of my sermon. I turned around, intrigued
by her query, because I barely knew her and she was not a member of our
church. I surmised that she had read my
sermon because the manuscript had flown from her desk to become available to
the congregation, but had no idea she would be touched by it. I was surprised that
she had been struck by the phrase that we are all ambassadors for Christ. In my mind, I was thinking---that is directly
from Paul. It’s nothing new. I don’t understand what the big deal is. At
the same time, I silently gave thanks for the working of the Holy Spirit in her
life. As I thought more about what she said, I was secretly happy that she got
it! I totally get the excitement of the seventy-some others about seeing the
results of their mission. Jesus had told them about the harvest and they had
seen, with their own eyes, the fruits of their labors.
However,
Jesus reminds them that the power he has given them is not what they should be
happy about. He said that we should be
happy that our names are written in heaven—that the kingdom of God has come
near to us. Think about it; the kingdom of God is known to us because someone,
or more likely many someones, in our lives preached it, taught it, and brought
us healing because of it as if directly from God. As Christians, we are never
without vocation. We are always both
witness to and conduit of God’s grace. We are the body of Christ. Give thanks and remember that your names are written
in heaven.
From Teresa
of Avila: “Christ has no body on earth but yours; no hands but yours; no feet
but yours. Yours are the eyes through which the compassion of Christ looks out
to the world. Yours are the feet with which he is to go about doing good. Yours
are the hands with which he is to bless others now.” Go in peace to love and
serve the Lord. Amen.
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