Jesus the Disrupter Mark 6:1-13 Rev. Matt Nieman July 8, 2018

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Transcription:

Jesus the Disrupter Mark 6:1-13 Rev. Matt Nieman July 8, 2018 Can you go home again? I suspect some of you have asked yourself that question at some point in your life. Can you return to the place you were born and raised and make a life there for yourself again after you ve been gone? It s not only a question about the hometown you re from. It s also a question pertaining to your first employer, your first love, your first friends, and even the first house you ever lived in. Can you go home again? Several years ago, right out of seminary, I had a chance to go back to my college alma mater and work on staff there. This was three years after I had left there as a staff member. This would ve been a ministry position much different than the position I had formerly held. And I decided I couldn t go home again. It just didn t feel right. The expectations of who I had formerly been there would ve carried over too much into the new position I had been offered. And they would not have aligned themselves. When you go home again, those back home remember who you were the last time and often expect you to be the same. And by that time, you ve changed, you ve grown. And the hometown folks scrutinize you because you re not the same person in some ways as when you left. Jesus runs into this issue today here in Mark. He returns to his hometown of Nazareth. And once there, his reception is not one of joyful reunion. The hometown folks find that Jesus is not who they remember him as. He s grown and now carries with him wisdom and knowledge they don t remember him having when he was a boy growing up there. Is this not the son of Mary and the brother of James and the others? they asked incredulously. It was as if they didn t recognize him. And more than that, they took offense at what he was teaching.

What Jesus said and did was disruptive and uncomfortable. And he was met with such resistance that Mark tells us his deeds of power were restricted to just a few healings. What was so disruptive about what he was doing? Was it his words, his actions, or the change in his perceived identity? We ll never know, but suffice it to say, based on what we know elsewhere in the gospels about Jesus, he was shaking up the religious establishment and the very core of what it meant to be a person of faith. It wasn t the religious leaders or the following of the law that made people right with God. It was their trust in Jesus as Savior and Son of God that he meant to convey. And he conveyed this message not only to just the religious faithful but to the marginalized and outcast as well. And then, Jesus, in essence, commissions his disciples to go out and be disrupters as well. But as they go, they are to travel light. And his urging them to travel light speaks to how they should be disruptive. And I think it s also a lesson for us, who read this lesson generations later. Travel light, he says. Travelling two by two, the disciples were not to take any money, or bag, or bread. Only a staff. And when they went into a place and were not welcomed, they were to shake the dust off their feet as they left. The disciples had important work to do, and yet they were beginners in this process. They were new at this. They hadn t been sent out before and certainly not sent out to be the disrupter Jesus was. And even though many of us have been people of faith for decades most of our lives even we still feel like beginners when we hear that the call of Jesus to go out by twos might apply to us as well. So what then is Jesus most important precaution he urges them to take? Travel light, because you re probably going to fall, and you ll have to quickly pick yourself up and dust yourself off. There s wisdom here in travelling light both literally and metaphorically. In our discipleship, the physical things that weigh us down often get in the way of our living faithfully. Our reliance on the stuff of the world makes it hard to focus on our jobs as disciples. And, when we

get knocked down in our quests to be faithful, our reliance on our material things keeps us from getting up quickly and going again. Our baggage, though, is more than just physical. We are weighted down by the guilt, the anger, the resentment, and the sorrow we keep close and have kept close to us for a long time. And then when we get knocked down on our journey of discipleship, no wonder we have a hard time getting up and starting again. All of us have many worries of the world. Whether it s the concerns we harbor for ourselves or our family members, or whether it s the concerns we harbor for the country, culture, or the world, we have a difficult time leaving our worries at the side of the road. But a life of joy and peace as God s children, a life of adventure sharing the gospel through our actions, can only come when we travel light. When we leave our worries on the side of the road at least for a while we are more apt to make it back up after we ve gotten knocked down. Jesus calls us to travel light, to lay down those things that would impede our progress, for after all, Christ has promised to carry our load. Dr. Daniel E. Fountain, a medical missionary in Africa recounts the following story: One day the chauffeur of our hospital pick-up truck in Africa was driving to one of our health centers. He noticed an elderly lady struggling along the road carrying a very heavy load of firewood on her head. The chauffeur stopped and offered to take the lady and her firewood to her village. He helped her into the back of the truck and then proceeded on his way. However, when he glanced in the rear-view mirror he was astonished to see this lady sitting in the back of the truck with the load of firewood back on top of her head! How often do we Christians fail to accept the promise of the Lord to carry our burdens? Andre Gide, the twentieth century French novelist, playwright, and essayist, wrote in 1919 a short meditation on Christianity entitled "The Pastoral Symphony," which was later adapted into a three-act play and motion picture. It revolves around the relational dynamic between a beautiful young woman named Gertrude, blind from birth, and a devout Swiss minister, who rescues her from a hovel and guides her from

darkness into light. And yet the light is blinding, more blinding than her blindness. When surgery suddenly enables her to see, two things awaken her soul with crushing pain. One is that "my eyes opened on a world more beautiful than I had ever dreamt it could be;...the daylight so bright, the air so brilliant, the sky so vast." The other thing that struck her powerfully, and that precipitated her death, was the way people's faces were "so full of care," pain and emptiness. She almost wishes that her eyes had never been opened by the miracle. Our pain and our emptiness weigh us down. Christ invites us to travel light by casting our burdens on him. A young, aspiring pitcher knew he was in trouble when the Little League coach approached the mound and said: "Son, I think I better have someone relieve you." "But," the pitcher argued, "I struck this guy out last time." "I know," said the coach. "But this is the same inning." Joy often happens when we get a little help. Like this poor pitcher, joy is sometimes spelled R-E-L-I-E-F! Christ brings us that relief. He invites us to put down those things that would keep us from moving forward and disrupting the world with our joy and the peace of new life. Some of you may be familiar with the old gospel song titled, "I wouldn't take nothing for my journey now" written by Charles Goodman and Jimmie Davis. Well, I wouldn't take nothin' for my journey now Gotta make it to heaven somehow Though the devil tempt me and he tried to turn me around He's offered everything that's got a name All the wealth I want and worldly fame If I could still I wouldn't take nothin' for my journey now Oh, there's nothin' in this world that'll ever take the place of God's love All the silver and gold wouldn't buy a touch from above

When the soul needs healin' and I begin to feelin' his power Then I can say, thank the Lord, I wouldn't take nothing for my journey now. Taking nothing, or next to nothing, for our journeys of faith is what our commission as disciples entails. For to do so means we ve cast our burdens on Jesus and are more equipped to be the humble disrupters Jesus wants us to be. The early disciples were able to go and cast out demons and anoint and cure the sick. That kind of loving disruption may only have been possible because the burdens of their lives had been laid aside placed upon and lovingly carried instead by a Savior and Son who could not go home again.