March 23, 2025 Sermon
/Transcript >
This is one of those sermons that I never wanted
to preach But here we are and here's the word
that God opened to my heart this last week it
starts with a confession a Couple of months ago
when I was mapping out the thematic trajectory
for my homilies for lent I found myself more
driven by the place I wanted to get to instead
of the message that is in the scripture itself.
I felt it appropriate in Lent this year to focus
this Sunday on the theme of waiting, and I kind
of grasped at the straw of the gardener's plea
to wait in chapter 13 of St. Luke's gospel, but
I wasn't really sure what else I had to work
with. And then I was surrounded by the profound
impact of waiting these last two weeks. My father
-in -law Mike would observe on occasion that
he had never lived more than 30 miles from Searcy,
Arkansas where he was born. I was never quite
sure if that was purely an observation, a badge
of honor, or some sort of lament. But considering
how much of a homebody he was, I think there
was at least a statement of contentment in that
observation. It was a fact of his life that he
accepted as he waited for the rest to unfold.
And I think maybe He's also content, having gone
to his eternal rest in that same town of Searcy.
Searcy, and Desaric, and Higginson, and Phoebe,
some of these little towns that hardly anyone
has ever heard of, are all clustered towards
the western edge of the great Mississippi alluvial
plain, where waiting is THE way of life. This
land is a land like every land. It charts its
own course and farmers and farm hands and whole
families and communities watch and listen and
wait for just the right time to act. Driving
to and then back from Julie's hometown, I watched
this mighty expanse of Delta region as we flew
by on Interstate 40. I watched as just now the
John Deere box drills get out underway seeding
this year's row crop of rice. In a week or two,
they'll probably turn around and do the same
with soybeans and corn and grain sorghum. But
none of that is ever guaranteed. Each season
brings its own timeline, its own season of waiting
and responding. And all of this is to say nothing
of the waiting we did as a family. Waiting for
the paperwork to get filled out, waiting for
family to arrive, the obituary to get published,
the visitation, the service, the burial to happen.
In a land of waiting, we waited too. And the
more that I sat with this waiting, the more I
thought about how much waiting actually does
permeate our readings for today. If we go back
and look at our first reading from Exodus chapter
3, we are immediately centered in a great act
of waiting. Our lesson begins with verse 1, but
if we look back to the second half of chapter
2, immediately before our reading today, We are
reminded that Moses is in Midian because he stood
up to Pharaoh's oppression of his people and
had to flee. And we are reminded too, as the
very last verses of chapter two indicate, that
the people of Israel have now been waiting a
long time to see their salvation. As verses 23
through 25 of chapter 2 say, after a long time
the king of Egypt died. The Israelites groaned
under their slavery and cried out. Out of the
slavery their cry for help rose up to God. God
heard their groaning and God remembered His covenant
with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. God looked upon
the Israelites and God took notice of them. In
our gospel passage, we have a little bit of an
odd situation. We have this ostensive question
that the crowd is posing to Jesus. It is not
framed as a question, but what they are actually
doing is bringing this situation, a group of
Galilean Jews who were killed while making their
sacrifice to Jesus. Asking him to confirm their
suspicion that these folks were killed because
of their sinfulness They were unrighteous and
therefore they suffered right Jesus The same
basic reality is true of this 18 on whom the
tower fell but Jesus in responding challenges
them in this assumption are all to whom bad things
happen, sinful, unrighteous people who deserve
what they get, not in God's kingdom, not in the
reality of God's work in this world. That is
the purpose of the parable. Sometimes we are
the land owner, the judgmental crowd wanting
the thing, not bearing fruit. or not producing
goodness to be uprooted and destroyed. Sometimes
we are the plant, the Galilean surrounded by
hardship and calamity wanting desperately to
experience fruitfulness and new life. Sometimes
we are in an in -between space where we do not
know which direction is up or down, which way
to turn or what to do next or where we are located
in such a paradigm or parable. Sometimes the
great gardener, Christ, calls us to let new care
and cultivation take root and simply wait. To
wait to see where we are located. To wait to
see what happens next in the next phase of life.
And that's true no matter where we fall in the
larger scheme of this story and the story of
our lives. 1 Corinthians 10, St. Paul is unpacking
some similar truths. Now we always have to be
mindful with the epistles that the universal
truths embedded in them are framed contextually.
Written to the communities to whom st. Paul was
writing Dealing with the issues of the day that
those communities were struggling with But we
are invited this morning To be curious about
the universal truths being communicated in this
historical and contextual What are we being tested
on today I think maybe that one place is precisely
this spiritual practice of waiting. Because I
think often we find ourselves falling into a
kind of sinful or unhelpful practice in waiting
or our inability to wait in two significant ways.
First is that disciplined of waiting itself.
In our culture, in our context, and our larger
society, we do not like to wait. We have a culture
of immediacy. We want and we want now. When one
or another person offends us, we want recompense
and restitution now. We want immediate action.
We crave instant response. And that is a practice,
a sin in our culture that has to be uprooted
and transformed. But similarly, we have sometimes
practice of waiting without action. We wait in
inactivity and that too is a sin that needs to
be uprooted and destroyed. Sometimes as the culture
around us continues to move, we in our waiting
stay immobile. When in fact we ought to be acting
we ought to be responding even if we do so imprecisely
Even as we do so in the context of further discernment
further insight further listening for what God
will have us to do I Think we often have this
attitude of waiting That makes it synonymous
with inactivity. That we wait without a sense
of doing. But anyone who is close to the land
will tell you that this just isn't true. My father
-in -law for decades was in the family logging
and timber business. And that's an industry that
is also rooted in waiting. waiting for trees
to mature, waiting for just that right time to
cut down and harvest the lumber that will be
used in so many industries in this country. But
that waiting is not inactivity. There is much
to be done to make the soil and the land the
proper and appropriate land. for growing and
strengthening these trees. Much to do to maintain
the health of the growth as you're waiting for
that season of harvest. My father -in -law was
also a very avid outdoorsman, and one of the
most poignant moments in these last two weeks
was just a day or two before we left. We have
about 35 family acres just down the road from
their house. Another 35 to 40 that we manage
in a lease for hunting property. And my brother
-in -law walked those 80 acres and we talked
about all of our hopes and aspirations for cultivating
that land for the purpose of having grains, having
seeds that deer can forage on, having a proper
wetland. for ducks, and all of that driven by
this love and this desire to be connected to
the land, to hunt and be able to have an appropriate
kind of place that animals will find appealing
and attractive. And as we wait, as we wait for
the time of the hunting season, we cultivate.
and we care for the land, the waiting is not
an activity but intimate and detailed attention
to the actions and activities we are called to
in that time of waiting. And so this morning,
as we continue this arc through our Lenten journey,
as we reflect on these building blocks, of having
first emptied ourselves in this time of transition
and growth. As we reflected last week on the
act of deep listening, we are invited this week
to think about the importance of waiting in that
time of listening and emptying. Because to listen
is to wait. To listen is to hear, to hear the
voice of God as we practice spiritual disciplines
of stopping, of pausing, of waiting. And that
doesn't mean that we do nothing. We continue
to go by and go about our lives. caring for,
loving, cultivating the places, relationships,
and cares that we are called to cultivate and
maintain. But equally, we are called to have
this time, to have this time in which we wait.
We wait, we wait to hear more fully the voice
of God. more fully the call to respond, more
fully the time to harvest, to move forward in
ever more fulsome action. And so this morning,
as we empty ourselves, as we listen, and in that
emptying and listening as we wait, may we hear
and experience and know ever more fully the presence
of God who comes to us in this time of waiting,
who transforms us ever more fully for the work
that lies ahead and prepares us ever more fully
for His coming kingdom, for the time of true
and full action. in which all things will be
made right and restored to their greater goodness
and glory. In the name of the Father, and of
the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.