Sermon manuscript for Green Lake Church of Seventh-day Adventists
Sabbath, August 23, 2014
We've been doing a sermon series
inspired my conversations with young atheists. For Americans my age,
the word “atheist” is an alien word, a harsh, jagged affront to
convention and conviction. But many young people nowadays happily
embrace the label. Just last week, sitting on the sidewalk at my
favorite table outside Teddy's Bigger Burgers on Green Lake Way, a
group of teenagers walked past. One of the guys asked the girl in the
group, “So, I hear you're an atheist.” Without the slightest
hesitation or awkwardness she launched into an explanation which I
did not hear because they had moved beyond my hearing. But I was
struck with the casualness of the entire conversation. It is that
kind of young, casual atheism that has been in my mind as I've worked
on this sermon series.
Once upon a time, a few thousand years
ago, the king of Damascus started sending raiding parties into
Israel, his neighbor to the south. The story as it comes down to us,
does not describe any precipitating event for these raids. The way I
imagine it, there was a new king on the throne, a young man. His
dad, the old king, had died. Now it was the young buck's turn. He
wanted to demonstrate his leadership, so he did what red-blooded
kings did in those days. He went to war. Not an all-out,
win-it-or-lose- everything war. He wasn't that crazy. But still it
was military action that would demonstrate his leadership—and bring
in some oil revenue (oops. I should have said olive oil revenue.)
The king led his army in a series of
cross-border raids. They set up carefully-planned ambushes. Maybe
they were waiting for a wagon train loaded with grain or a camel
caravan carrying more expensive stuff. Whatever. They would set up a
perfect ambush. The secrecy would absolute. The camouflage flawless.
Then nothing would happen. No traffic would come down the road. Not
even any Israeli military patrol. Nothing. The raiding party would be
sitting there, baking in the sun, eating their own provisions. Bored.
Frustrated. And very embarrassed. Because eventually they would head
home with nothing to show for their effort.
My guess is the king got mad. (You
don't want the king mad!) The king tried different places, different
strategies. But every ambush came up empty.
Finally, the king called in all his
officers and threw a temper tantrum. “Who is the traitor?” he
demanded. “Obviously, one of you is leaking our plans to the enemy.
It's the only possible explanation. We have tried every possible
method of ambush. Every accessible road across northern Israel. Every
time we come up empty. It's crystal clear the enemy is getting inside
information. So who is it?”
He stared around the circle of his
commanders. It was a pretty tense moment. Each officer knew his own
innocence, but still . . . What if someone else suspected him? What
if someone started pointing fingers just to divert attention? Maybe
some of these officers had Israeli slaves, maybe an Israeli wife or
mistress—connections that could look really suspicious if anyone
pointed the finger his direction.
People were sweating. The king's eyes
were bugging out. “Who? Who is it? You might as well 'fess up
because I'm going to find out. Someone is spilling secrets to the
Israelis.”
Minutes passed. People didn't move.
They scarcely breathed.
Then an old man on the king's right
spoke up. He was by far the oldest in the group. Old enough to be the
king's father. He had, in fact, served with the king's father for
decades.
“Sir, we are your loyal servants. We
are not traitors. But I can tell you who is passing secrets.”
He had the king's attention. “So?
Who?”
“Sir, it's nobody in this circle.
It's a prophet named Elisha. He's amazing. Years ago, before you were
born, when your father was king, the commander of our army was
diagnosed with leprosy. He had a Jewish servant girl who had claimed
that if he went to Samaria there was a prophet there who would cure
him. Naaman went down there with a load of gold and came back healed.
Sir, his skin was like a baby's skin. I would not have believed it if
I hadn't seen it myself. That's the kind of power this prophet has.
There are even stories of him raising the dead. Elisha can tell the
King of Israel what you whisper to your woman when your heads are on
one pillow.
“So, be gentle with your men, Sir.
They are as hungry for victory and booty as you are.”
I'm always amused by what happens next.
To me it is strong evidence that the Damascus king was young and
brash.
“Go find out where the prophet is and
let's capture him!” The king ordered.
It was a fool's errand, but warriors do
as their superiors direct. The Damascus special forces headed south
to find Elisha.
They had reports of Elisha being in the
town of Dothan. They marched through the night and surrounded the
town. Surprisingly, Elisha was still there. God had not alerted him
to leave. The soldiers were thrilled. The king was going to be really
happy.
Shortly after sunrise an old man
appeared on a roof top near the city wall. He looked out their
direction, appeared to engage in prayer and that was the last anyone
in the army saw. During the prayer, the entire army went blind. They
could see nothing. The old man had amazing power.
A little later, an old man approached
the army asking to speak to the commander. When the commander was
located the old man asked, “What's up?”
“We are looking for the prophet,
Elisha.” The commander said.
The old man began laughing. “You've
got it all wrong. You're in the wrong place. You're chasing the wrong
man.” That much was not all that surprising. The army commander did
not really think Elisha would really be sitting in a small walled
city waiting for the Damascus special forces to surround it. On the
other hand, the power of the old man they had seen to blind the
entire army suggested the old man must be the fabled prophet.
The old man told the commander, “Follow
me. I'll take you where you need to go.”
What could the commander do? He was
blind. His entire army was blind. They were in enemy territory.
Following the old man sounded like walking into a trap, but the
commander didn't have a lot of options. He was in the heart of enemy
territory. Blind. Any moment he expected to feel the edge of a sword
against his neck.
So the commander grouped his men. Then
hands on shoulders, the mass of warriors shuffled down the road,
scared to death, wondering when they were going to fall into a pit,
or find themselves on the point of a spear.
For hours, they stumbled along. Hot,
thirsty, hungry. Then they could tell they were going through
something. A tunnel? A cave entrance? A gate? Maybe this was the end.
A few minutes later, they hear the old
man's voice. He addressed his God. “Lord, open their eyes!”
Instantly they could see. The view was
not too reassuring. They were staring at the tips of arrows notched
in drawn bows, raised swords, pointed spears. This was not good. I'm
guessing at this point the soldiers were not too happy with their boy
king back in Damascus. What did that fool, the king, imagine he was
going to accomplish by messing with the prophet?
Up to this point, this story sounds
like other ancient tales of warriors and wizards and magic. But this
is not a fairy tale. It is not a story of military folly or magic or
romance. It's theology. The story sets up a profound moral lesson.
The King of Israel surveying the band
of enemy warriors imprisoned in his town square and says to the
prophet Elisha. “Shall I kill them? Shall I obliterate them?”
Imagine for a minute that Elisha was
not there. Imagine the king asked you what to do. And your job is to
tell the king God's will for this moment. What did God want the king
to do?
Remember these Damascus soldiers were
part of an army that had been practicing naked aggression. Completely
without provocation, they have been crossing Israel's borders aiming
to do harm and steal stuff. They came from a nation that had been
warring with Israel off and on for generations.
These warriors had been captured on an
evil, deadly mission. What should the king do with them? What was
God's will?
Among the young people I talk to, the
label atheist means a commitment to honesty, justice, and compassion.
When they call themselves atheist they are announcing their refusal
to agree with the institutional church when it damages people or
advocates error. It is a sign that they regard human well-being as a
higher value than any dogma, including religious dogma.
So I respect my young atheist friends.
But sometimes, when I'm feeling a little grumpy, I challenge them.
“Just what kind of atheist are you? The most famous atheists in my
life time have not been very nice people.”
When they think of atheists, they think
of people like Hemant Mehta who writes a blog called “The Friendly
Atheist.” Mehta is generally polite. He seems like a nice guy. But
I think of atheists, I think of people like Mao Tse-Tung, Stalin and
Pol Pot. Mao killed fifty million Chinese in an engineered famine.
Stalin killed twenty million people he didn't think were good for the
Soviet Union. Pol Pot thought atheism was the best philosophy for his
country and killed twenty-five percent of the population in his zeal
to prove that his ideas were the very best.
My young friends get impatient at this
point. They would never kill people. They would never approve of the
kind of barbarity practiced by Mao, Stalin and Pol Pot.
Still my questions are not irrelevant.
Historically speaking, atheism has not always been a bright, shining
pursuit of truth and justice. Sometimes it is the name of a dark and
evil force.
With this as background, let's go back
to our story.
What was God's will for the king of
Israel as he surveyed a town square full of dangerous soldiers from
an enemy country? What would God do with all these bad men?
This is a tricky question. Our gut
tells us that mercy is the right answer, but someone else might argue
that God is a stern judge and king. And they could quote Bible verses
in support of the king's idea of killing the captives.
They could quote Moses' words about
Sihon, King of Hesbon:
And we took all
his cities at that time, and utterly destroyed the men, and the
women, and the little ones, of every city, we left none to remain.
Deuteronomy 2:34
Or the report in Joshua about what
God's directions regarding the people of Jericho:
And they utterly
destroyed all that was in the city, both man and woman, young and
old, and ox, and sheep, and ass, with the edge of the sword. Joshua
6:21 (There was an exception made for Rahab and her family, but other
than that . . . )
Or the instructions of the Prophet
Samuel to King Saul regarding Amalekites:
Now go and smite
the Amalekites, and utterly destroy all that they have, and spare
them not; but slay both man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and
sheep, camel and ass. 1 Samuel 15:3
If you based your advice to the king on
these Bible verses, what would you say? What would be the right
answer to the question, “Shall I smite them?”
It is these verses that cause our young
atheist friends to challenge us when we say we believe in God. They
want to know, just what God do we believe in? The God of hell fire
and capital punishment and genocide and the stoning of brides who
cannot prove their virginity on the day of their marriage? Is that
the God we believe in? Do we believe in the God of Westboro Baptist
Church and Mark Driscoll?
It is entirely fair that our young
friends ask us this question.
And what is our answer?
We believe in the God of Elisha. Elisha
told the king, “If you had captured these soldiers with your own
sword, you would remember the rules of war. Captives must be fed. So
feed them. Give them something to drink. And send them home to their
master.”
The king did what the prophet said. And
the story ends—they lived happily ever after. Well, not in those
words, but that's the sentiment. Syria quit raiding Israel. Peace was
created.
When I tell my young atheist friends
about the God I believe in, this is the God I tell them about—the
God of peace. The God who forgives. The God whose grand goal is not
retribution but reconciliation. The God whose supreme purpose is not
appropriate punishment but glorious healing.
The genocide of the Old Testament is
not God's ideal. The commandments in the Old Testament to kill
people—whether in genocide, stoning for adultery, or blessing
soldiers who commit atrocities—these commands do not express the
character and purpose of God. Rather they reflect the brokenness of
humanity. The highest virtue of religion is to heal that brokenness,
to cultivate a vision that is higher and more noble than retribution,
condemnation and punishment.
When we say we believe in God, we are
declaring our allegiance to God's program to move people away from
brokenness toward wholeness, away from anger and alienation toward
reconciliation and peace, away from wickedness to goodness, away
from fierceness to harmony.
My guess is when we get this right,
when we as a people speak the language of justice and peace and live
in harmony with the principles of righteousness, our young atheist
friends will see what we are doing and will hear what we are saying,
and they will say, “Yes. That's what we meant.”
This past Wednesday, I was back at my
favorite table on Green Lake Way eating my vegeburger, working on my
sermon when another group of teenagers came by. I could hear them
coming. They were asking other diners along the sidewalk for a dollar
and sixty cents. They needed that much to buy a pizza. No one was
buying.
They got to where I was sitting. “Hey,
any chance you could give us a dollar and sixty cents? We're that
much short for a pizza.”
It was a test. I had wanted the
teenagers who walked past the week before, talking about atheism to
stop and let me join the conversation. I love getting all
philosophical with kids. But, of course, they didn't stop.
Instead the kids who stop are people
who are hungry and are looking for money not wisdom. So I walked next
door with the kids, had them place their order and put their money on
the counter, then I added a couple of bucks to their pile so they
could get their pizza.
I didn't know their stories. I don't
know how they ended up that afternoon on Green Lake Way, a dollar and
sixty cents short the cost of medium pizza. But I had money in my
pocket and food in my belly. And the God I believe in says when we
have sufficient, we are called to share.
We believe in God, the God of Elisha.
The God who helps and heals, who forgives and reconciles, the God who
creates peace and harmony. The more deeply we believe in this God and
the more consistently we live in harmony with God's glorious ideals,
the easier it will be for our young atheist friends to join and say,
“We, too, believe.”
1 comment:
Beautiful message. Thank you.
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