Sunday, October 19, 2014
The Journey Begins
For purposes of understanding, I am re-posting my initial post to state my vision for this blog:
The Road goes ever on and on Down from the door where it began. Now far ahead the Road has gone, And I must follow, if I can, Pursuing it with eager feet, Until it joins some larger way Where many paths and errands meet. And whither then? I cannot say. (Bilbo Baggins, The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring) With a light heart and “eager feet,” this blog begins. Where will it lead? “I cannot say.” But I can offer this hope: I hope that as we journey together we will catch glimpses of the possibilities that may lie just around the next corner, or that may yet remain if we but take a step or two back the way we came. I journey as a Christian and a Presbyterian pastor. It is right and fair you should know that about me as you consider giving me the privilege of your company. I take each step in the expectant hope that we have a Companion on our journey who is true to his promise, “I will never leave you or forsake you…I am with you always.” If I have a walking stick to aid my steps, it is this promise, and I hope that together, we will catch glimpses of him along the way (for he is so very good at hiding). Glimpses such as this: I went to Pep Boys this afternoon to buy replacement headlights for our vehicle. We were a pa-diddle (sp?) with one light out. When I attempted to install these lights, they did not fit. So I returned to the store, told my story, and asked to exchange them. The clerk looked at the parts and asked if I had driven the vehicle. When I said, “Yes,” he asked if I would pop the hood. Done. He fiddled for a moment or two, asked me to turn on the lights, and voila! No more pa-diddle! He then refunded me the money for the parts and refused to charge me for the help. Who knew Jesus worked at Pep Boys?
My Journey Regarding Same-Sex Marriage and Being a Christian
Royal weddings make a big “to do” before bride and groom
say, “I do.” The weeks leading up to the wedding of Prince William and Kate
Middleton inundated us with in depth analysis of every aspect of the big day:
The flowers, the hair and make-up, the dress. I remember seeing an itinerary
that broke the event down into 3 minute increments; 3 minutes! I was quite
thankful to not be the clergyman officiating that service. I could just see the
wedding coordinator stepping up mid-sermon and saying, “Terribly sorry,
Reverend, but could you bring your remarks to a conclusion? We’re behind
schedule.”
That would be distressing. My stiff upper lip might even
quiver, but that is nothing compared to the disaster Jesus describes in “The
Parable of the Wedding Feast;” “parable of the wedding fiasco” might be a
better title.
A prince is getting married. His father the king sends out
the invitations. No one RSVP’s. He tells the caterers to go ahead and prepare
the feast, and he sends out more invitations. Not only do the recipients not RSVP,
they seize his servants, abuse them, and kill them.
Kings do not tolerate such behavior; the reprisal is swift
and severe, but the prince is still getting married. The king’s wrath is
replaced by his generosity. “Invite everyone, the good and the bad, so my hall
is filled for my son’s wedding.”
“Y’all come,” as they say down south, and they came, but one
fellow didn’t have the proper attire. “No shirt, no shoes, no service,” so the
king orders that this wedding crasher be thrown “into the outer darkness, where
there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.”
This king has issues, so do we. This week, the Supreme Court
declined to act regarding 5 states laws permitting same-sex marriage. With this
decision, a majority of Americans now live in states that allow same-sex
marriage. We live in a state that allows same-sex marriage.
We have issues. What should we do? Every wedding in a
Presbyterian church is authorized by Session; Session has the power to set
policy; our present policy defines marriage as being “between a man and a
woman,” thus prohibiting same-sex marriage.
We have issues. Feelings run high on both sides of the question,
and I confess that I was tempted to leave this alone and play it safe; but when
the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church USA recommended changes to our
Directory for Worship that would allow same-sex marriage, it was our turn to
make headlines. The following Sunday, two of us asked me the same question at
different times: “Would I officiate at a same-sex wedding?” I suspect one
wanted to hear “yes” and one “no.” Instead, I said that I wouldn’t do anything
that would hurt our church. We have to be ready for that wedding.
Leaving this issue alone won’t get us ready. The anxiety and
turmoil we feel (probably right now) testify to our need to think faithfully
(faith-fully) about same-sex marriage. We won’t complete that journey this
morning, but we will begin. We will begin through this puzzling parable that
Jesus taught us about a wedding crasher crashing the wedding.
1.
Crashing the Wedding
The first time the king sends out the invitation; no one
RSVP’s. The reason many Christians would not RSVP to a same-sex marriage and
why the thought of their church and their pastor being involved in a same-sex
marriage causes deep distress is that the Bible says that such relations are a
sin. How can we bless what the Bible condemns?
I’ve studied this in some depth over the past few years, and
my conclusion is that what the Bible is talking about isn’t the same as what we
are talking about. I am convinced that the Bible is talking about pagan worship
practices and about abusive practices in the Greco-Roman world.
Simply put, I
can affirm what those passages teach without concluding that the same-sex
relations we are talking about are a sin.
My mind has changed in the last 5 years. It has changed
about homosexuality. It has changed about same-sex marriage.
What started me on
that journey was the gospel itself. Matthew 22:8–9 (NRSV) 8 Then he said to his slaves, ‘The wedding is ready, but those
invited were not worthy. 9 Go
therefore into the main streets, and invite everyone you find to the wedding
banquet.’
Crashing the wedding is central to the gospel: radical
inclusiveness permeates the message of Jesus. Whatever we think about this
issue, we cannot ignore the way God keeps reaching out with good news:
Matthew 11:28–29 (NRSV) 28 “Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy
burdens, and I will give you rest. 29 Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me; for I am gentle and
humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.
John 10:16 (NRSV) 16 I have other sheep that do not belong to this fold. I must
bring them also, and they will listen to my voice. So there will be one flock,
one shepherd.
John 3:16 (NRSV) 16 “For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so
that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life.
Crashing the wedding is central to the gospel; the good news
of Jesus Christ is open and inviting, but the traditional stance that condemned
homosexuality and forbade same-sex marriage resulted in the perception that God
hated homosexuals and that Christians hate homosexuals. To be sure, we talked
about “loving the sinner and hating the sin,” but people didn’t believe it; in
particular, homosexuals and their families and friends did not believe it. What
they heard (and what they all too often experienced) was “throw them into the
outer darkness where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.”
Since the Presbyterian Church proposed this change in its
wedding policy, it has been interesting to observe the response. John
MacArthur, a prominent evangelical pastor and writer called us, “Satan’s
church.” Members and congregations have left the denomination. We’ve been
condemned. We’ve been rejected. And I wonder if this is what it has been like
to be a homosexual in the church all-along? I wonder if this is why it is so
hard for folks to come out of the closet, especially to their pastor, because
they rightly fear what the response will be.
I realize this isn’t easy. I recognize that this is a major
change of mind. Set aside your preconceived notions. See the homosexual, see
same-sex marriage through eyes of Jesus and the good news of the gospel. God
loves us all; God invites us all, gay and straight, to crash his wedding. Shouldn’t
we do the same?
2.
The Wedding Crasher
Does this mean there is no morality anymore; we can do
whatever we want? What can we say about “right and wrong” if we are to welcome
“good and bad?”
The king crashes his own wedding. Good and bad are invited.
If the parable ended there, the message of radical inclusivity would be
absolute, but the parable doesn’t end there. Instead, Jesus introduces a
wedding crasher who isn’t properly attired and pays a terrible price for it.
God loves us too much to leave us alone. This truth is often
invoked to challenge the homosexual to change their behavior, but it also
challenges you and me to change our minds, our attitudes, and our behavior.
As the Apostle Paul put it: Philippian 4:8-9 Finally, beloved, whatever is true, whatever is
honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is pleasing, whatever
is commendable, if there is any excellence and if there is anything worthy of
praise, think about these things. 9Keep
on doing the things that you have learned and received and heard and seen in
me, and the God of peace will be with you.
The question this parable puts to you and me is: Who are you
wearing to the wedding?
When Prince William and Kate Middleton had their big day, we
knew who they were wearing. Prince Harry caused a stir by wearing the red tunic
of the Irish Guard rather than the blue uniform of the Royal Air Force in which
he is a captain; but, the big question was who Kate would wear, and The
Sunday Times published their scoop a full month before the wedding that she
would be wearing a dress designed by Sarah Burton of the McQueen fashion house.
This too caused a stir as McQueen is owned by the Italian firm Gucci, and it
was the first time a British-owned house wasn’t chosen.
Who are you wearing to the wedding? Who sets the shape of and
designs your attitudes and actions?
The wedding crasher wasn’t properly attired. His attitudes
and actions did not fit the king’s invitation.
Galatians 3:27–28 (NRSV) 27 As
many of you as were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. 28 There
is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer
male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.
The good news of the gospel demands a response, an RSVP if
you will; that response is to clothe ourselves with Jesus Christ. Being a
Christian means being committed to become more and more like Jesus Christ
every-day; every-day at work and every-day at home and every-day anywhere we
may be. Being a Christian also means becoming more and more like Jesus Christ
in every relationship, most notably in our marriages.
Marriage is lifted up in Ephesians as a model for the
relationship between Jesus and the Church. Revelation describes the Church as
“the bride of Christ.” Marriage throughout the Bible is the central ordering
covenant relationship of human beings. The wedding industry might want to sell
the notion that a wedding is about romance, but the Bible is clear that
marriage is about discipleship; marriage is about clothing ourselves with Jesus
Christ as we model his relationship with the Church through our relationship
with our husband or our wife.
Marriage is a covenant that brings moral order to our lives
and to society. Denying gays and lesbians the right to marry denies them the
opportunity and more importantly the responsibility to bring moral order to
their lives and thereby add to the moral order in our society. Consecrating
same-sex marriages offers the opportunity and the responsibility to each
partner to be clothed with Jesus Christ and become more and more like him every
day in every way through the particular trials and tribulations that they will
experience through their marriages. Simply put, making promises to God and to
one another of love and faithfulness are easy; keeping those promises is the
work of a lifetime, “til death do us part.”
Who are you wearing to the wedding? Clothe yourself with
Jesus Christ. Husbands, love your wives. Wives, love your husbands. Before we
talk about someone else’s marriage vows, let’s be sure we fulfill our own!
God loves us too much to leave us alone. We cannot evade the
question of same-sex marriage. One way or another, every church and every
Christian will answer it.
How will we answer it? Answer it like Christ. Answer it by
looking at our gay and lesbian neighbor as a brother and sister in Christ.
Answer it by seeing “them” as “one of us” for whom Christ died, one of us who
is also an invited guest and not a wedding crasher. Amen.
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