Ladders, Circles,
Covenant: Year A, Proper 11
Genesis 28:10-19a; Wisdom of Solomon 12:13,
16-19; Isaiah 44:6-8; Psalm 139:1-12, 23-24; Psalm 86:11-17; Romans
8:12-25; Matthew 13:24-30, 36-43
We are climbing Jacob’s Ladder,
soldiers of the cross.
We are dancing Sarah's Circle,
sisters, brothers, all.
Every round goes higher, higher,
soldiers of the cross
Here we seek and find our story,
sisters, brothers, all.
Sinner do you love my Jesus?
soldiers of the cross.
We will all do our own naming,
sisters, brothers, all.
If you love him why not serve
him? soldiers of the cross
Every round a generation, sisters,
brothers, all.
We are climbing Jacob’s ladder,
soldiers of the cross
On and on the circle's moving,
sisters, brothers, all
The Abraham saga continues, with Jacob’s dream. Christian dogma
claims that Jacob’s dream is about divinity interacting with
humanity. The patriarchs of ancient Israel were all 100% human,
even though they may have dreamt of a great destiny. But
Christianity trumps all that with the human/divine Jesus/God, who came
to dwell among us. Cherry-picked Paul piously points orthodox
theology into the apocalyptic future, “while we wait for adoption, the
redemption of our bodies.” Matthew’s Jesus rants that “The son of
Adam will send his messengers and they will gather all the snares and
the subverters of the Law out of his domain and throw them into the
fiery furnace [where] people will weep and grind their teeth.”
Jewish legend says that Jacob’s pillar, which he set up to mark the
spot of his prophetic dream, (Beth El) is the same spot where his
father Isaac was prepared by Abraham for sacrifice; it is also the
Temple Mount of present-day Jerusalem. Global political and
religious layers of meaning surround this story. It should be
treated with respect, and not with glib literalism by anyone, including
descendants of the People of the Book.
Recent Christian youth and feminist leadership has replaced the
militant sexism of “climbing Jacob’s ladder, soldiers of the cross”
with “dancing Sarah’s circle, sisters, brothers all.” Somehow the
original seems more honest. “Sinner do you love my Jesus?
If you love him, why not serve him? Soldiers of the cross” can’t be
mistaken for peaceful coexistence with Jews, Muslims, or any other
non-Christian spirituality. “Dancing Sarah’s Circle” sounds
inclusive, but Christian hegemony lurks in the background like a
watermark on fine stationery: “Here is where we find our story;
we will all do our own naming; every round a generation, sisters,
brothers all.” The story of Sarah, Keturah, Rebekka, Rachel,
Leah, Dinah, Bilhah, Zilpah, and all the other women, named and
unnamed, who contributed to the founding mythos of the Jewish people
and the Jewish religion is not a Christian story – except by
“adoption.” That is certainly not where Paul was trying to take
his Roman community.
The power in these readings is the power of covenant
relationship. In Jacob’s dream, God’s voice confirms the promise
made to his grandfather Abraham and his father Isaac, that the land
belongs to them and their descendants, and those descendants shall be
as numerous as the grains of dust on the earth. God also promises
that wherever Jacob and his descendants go, God is still their
God. So God and God’s realm are not confined to a particular
geographical location, but reside in the hearts of those who accept the
Covenant. The Elves leave out Jacob’s part
of the deal. For the first time, the patriarchs make a promise to
God. Jacob promises to establish the pillar as “God’s house,” and
to return to God one-tenth of everything God gives to him. Genesis 28:19b-22. As the
editor of the Harper Collins Study
Bible wryly comments, “Jacob’s faith is more markedly
contractual than Abraham’s” (p. 43).
The portion of Paul’s letter plucked out of context for Proper 11 is
also about Covenant. Whenever we join Jesus in the relationship
with God that is so close as to be the same as a father, we are then
children of God, and heirs of God. What do we inherit?
Rather than one strip of real estate in the Middle East, the heirs of
God, brothers and sisters of the Christ, inherit the Realm/Kingdom of
God, where distributive justice rules. The caveat is that we
“suffer” with Jesus. In other words, we participate with the
spirit of Jesus in restoring/reclaiming God’s realm of distributive
justice-compassion. “Suffering” is not about persecution and
torture for believing that a corpse came back to life.
“Suffering” is what happens when we attempt to live in radical
abandonment of self-interest and fail. “Suffering” is what
happens when by extraordinary commitment we succeed in achieving that
radical abandonment of self-interest, and the systems of retribution
inherent in empire intervene.
Paul rhapsodizes on: “. . . for the creation waits with eager longing
for the revealing of the children of God; . . . that the creation
itself will be set free from its bondage to decay and will obtain the
freedom of the glory of the children of God. . .” This is not
about believers going to heaven in the next life. It is about
partners actualizing the promise of God’s rule in this life. The
“children of God” are not some superior race. They are whoever
joins the program – Christian or non-Christian; people “of the book” or
not. Has this happened yet? No. “But if we hope for
what we do not see, we wait for it with patience.” The Elves cut
him off here in mid-argument. The finale comes next week.
Meanwhile, Matthew’s Jesus proceeds to further complicate and rob the parable of the sower of its
covenantal transforming power. He has apparently forgotten his
own Sermon on the Mount and has sold out to fear. The parable of
the sabotage of weeds introduces an enemy that comes in the night and
sows weed seed in the field so that it is impossible to eradicate the
weeds without also destroying the good crop. (Sort of like that
hapless Canadian farmer who was sued by Monsanto.)
In a variation on the 13th Century epithet, “slay them all, God will know his
own,” this apocalyptic Jesus says, “Let them grow up together until the
harvest, and . . . I’ll say to the harvesters, ‘Gather the weeds first
and bind them in bundles to burn . . . .’” What happened to “love your
enemies”? Matthew 5:44.
Matthew’s Christian community – which possibly had been thrown out of
their synagogue, or had chosen to leave – was very likely under
siege. Viewed with suspicion by their neighbors, confronted with
the destruction of the Temple, under surveillance by the Roman
authorities, who can blame them for finding it difficult to love their
enemies? That 1st or 2nd Century community, and others in similar
circumstances, was not much different from communities today.
Certainly the governments and the people in the Middle East are still
fighting the land battles described in all the foundational
myths. Dictatorships and oligarchies from Asia to Africa to South
America deny human rights to their citizens to the detriment of their
nations’ economic well-being. Further, since September 11,
2001, American society has been under political, social, and economic
threat – mostly self-inflicted.
We do not need to follow Matthew’s Jesus into paranoia and the
fear-mongering that arises from it. As the apostle Paul says, the
present problems are nothing, compared with the transformation that is
coming. The Elves should have had us read on in Romans 8 to verses 26-30. “The
Spirit helps us in our weakness,” Paul says. “We know that all
things work together for good for those who love God, who are called
according to his purpose.” What is that call and purpose?
To be partners with Jesus in bringing God’s realm of distributive
justice-compassion into human civilization. “For those whom [God]
foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son,
in order that he might be the firstborn within a large family.”
What God knows and does looks to us like prior action, the editor
reminds us. Harper-Collins
Study Bible, NRSV, p. 2127. So Paul is not talking about
some “predestination” that we are powerless to modify, which
fore-ordains some to be “chosen” for “salvation” and others “chosen”
for damnation. We are adopted children of God, and because of
that, we are conformed to the image of Jesus the Christ. “Those
whom [God] predestined he also called; and those whom he called he also
justified; and those whom he justified he also glorified.”
Wow. The crowd should be on its feet cheering. All we have
to do is sign up. Those whom God/dess knew would be her own,
s/hecalled. Those whom God/dess called and who responded were
thereby made holy and just; and those who were made just, were
celebrated as belonging to – even inheriting– the kingdom, without
bargain or price.
The Circle is open but unbroken, and the traffic on Jacob’s ladder is
an interchange.
BLOG ARCHIVE