Eighth Sunday after Pentecost: July 14, 2024

The Rev. Nat Johnson

Readings

2 Samuel 6:1-5, 12b-19 | Psalm 24 | Ephesians 1:3-14 | Mark 6:14-29

Over the next handful of weeks, the lectionary assigns parts of the letter to the Ephesians as our second reading. It is a letter that is drenched in prayer, calling its readers to a posture of prayer, to a search for a common identity bathed in prayer. It speaks of unity that transgresses but does not erase difference, a unity that is founded not in any earthly or human category but in the gracious disposition of a God who desires all things to find their true identity in their belovedness and in God’s peace.

The opening chapter is one long sentence in the original language, setting the rest of the content of the letter in a blessing of God while simultaneously inviting the letter’s hearers do the same. At the same time, the blessing allows the author to narrate God’s drama of salvation, a drama that began before the foundation of the world that reaches its goal and climax as all things are caught up into Christ. This drama of salvation is cosmic in scope, inclusive of but transcending the individual soul.

The opening blessing then moves into a prayer on behalf of the Ephesians. The writer prays that they will not only understand the significance and scope of God’s story of salvation but come to recognize their particular place within it. He explains that the alienation from God and one another they had experienced before Christ had been overcome by God’s gracious act of redemption in and through Christ, and he points to their incorporation as a tangible sign of God’s astonishing plan to bring all nations and peoples into communion with God’s chosen people through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. This vision of unity and reconciliation finds its source in God’s revelation, in the plan of the fullness of time as it is revealed in Jesus the Christ, the beloved of God. It is a plan that by no means is dependent upon the recipients’ participation but that nevertheless invites their cooperation through the embodiment of divine wisdom that shapes their common life and demonstrates the unity already effected in Jesus.

This cooperation, the writer tells them, is fleshed out in their living in a manner worthy of their calling, in their developing certain habits, practices, and dispositions intended to maintain the “unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.” Living in a manner worthy of their calling will require the Ephesians to break from their past, to leave behind the habits, practices and dispositions that characterized their life apart from Christ. This kind of life will run countercultural and ought to impact every aspect of the Ephesians’ lives – in the common life they share as a community dedicated to God and in their individual lives as they bear witness to the redemption and peace they have graciously received from God in Christ. The writer admits that living a life worthy of their calling will put them at odds with those in the world who still operate in an economy of violence and oppressive power, and so he encourages them to put on the armor of God, relying not on their own strength but on the strength of God.

Throughout the entire letter, the instructions given to the Ephesians is shrouded in prayer and blessing, demonstrating that the wisdom bestowed and the call to worthy living is not based on human wisdom or strength but on the very grace and blessing of God so freely given.

In our present moment, it might be difficult to hear the blessing and its content in the opening chapter we read a few moments ago. We might balk at words like “chosen” and “destined” because of the ways these have been coopted by various strands of Christian nationalism and expressions of Christianity hellbent on a gospel of exclusion. But the letter to the Ephesians invites us to hear these descriptions anew, to consider once again our own designation as chosen by God in Christ, as beloved of God in Christ.

Perhaps this morning you carry with you today a sense of pain or suffering, of failure or rejection, of shame or guilt. Perhaps you hold the good news of God at a distance, acknowledging God’s love for you and for the world in generic terms, as an intellectual concept rather than a lived reality. If this is the case for you today, I encourage you to hear afresh the astonishing claim of the blessing that opens this letter to the Ephesians:

God has given us every Spiritual blessing in the heavens – this blessing is not about material possessions; it is not about health or wealth, but about God’s loving embrace of us – of you and of me and of all things. To receive this blessing is to accept a love that is deeply and abidingly personal. It draws us out of the safety of generic love. It closes the distance of a generic God who loves us in generic ways and draws us into a relational love that binds us to Godself and heals all sources of alienation. It dares us to see that this love is at once temporal and encompasses a cosmic goal, inclusive of all things in heaven and on earth, a love that seeks to heal and restore and unite.

This can be difficult for us to imagine – particularly in our present moment where violent rhetoric, hatred, and division enfold all aspects of our political and social world. It can be difficult to imagine that there really is a way out of the vicious cycles of division, the constant state of wars, the destructive motives of the world’s powers and principalities. The hope to which we are called and the good news we are called to embody by living a life worthy of our calling is indeed the scandal of the gospel!

If we can dare to believe in our belovedness, if we can dare to hope in God’s plan for the fullness of time, we will discover a power that enables us to see beyond the impossibilities of this world, to imagine beyond the unimaginable of our present moment. We will discover that we are empowered to live a different truth than what is professed by the world around us, a truth that is expressed in prayer and praise, in grace and peace. This is the inheritance that we receive, an inheritance that shapes and colors our lives by the beauty of God’s glory and blessing.

Today, let us accept the grace and peace offered to us in Christ Jesus. Let us open wide our arms to God’s declaration that we are beloved, that we have a place in God’s drama of salvation, that we are blessed so that we might also bestow God’s blessing. May it be so.

Previous
Previous

Ninth Sunday after Pentecost: July 21, 2024

Next
Next

Fourth Sunday after Pentecost: June 16, 2024