two people with two very special needs. A mother with a Syrian (today Both individuals were surely ostracized, rejected and most likely had to face

Similar documents
Crumbs of Abundance Sermon on Mark 7:24-37, Rev. Berry French September 6, BMPC

Introduction Of all the gospels, Mark is the fastest gospel, and the most straightforward

The First Reading: Proverbs 22:1-2, 8-9, Reader: A Reading from the Book of Proverbs.

Paul, an Apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God to the. saints, that is the holy ones, who are in Oak Grove and faithful to

Opening Up. First Congregational United Church of Christ Eagle River, Wisconsin September 9, Dale L. Bishop

Christians. Also, Jesus never gave his disciples a particular name. The word

Changed by His Glory

Jesus Changes His Mind Matthew 15:21-28 August 14, 2011

Our gospel reading today presents the two extremes of WORDS and ACTIONS, through two back-to-back encounters Jesus has with two people in need.

Just this week, at a different church, when this passage came up in adult Sunday School, the ladies there wasted no time explaining to me that, after

She knows what it s like to be covered in shame. She s a gentile, a Syrophoenician. The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob? He s not her God.

Amazed at the Power of Jesus

James 2:1-17; Warning against Partiality Faith without Works Is Dead Mark 7:24-37 The Syrophoenician Woman s Faith

Mark 7 in ASL 117 Chapter 7. One day some Pharisees and teachers of religious law arrived from Jerusalem to see Jesus. Verse 2. They noticed that some

The Miracles of Jesus Miracle # 20. The Miracle of the Syro-Phoenician Woman Daughter (Matthew 15:21-28, Mark 7:24-30)

SPIRITUAL GIFTS ASSESSMENT DISCOVER YOUR SPIRITUAL GIFTS

Davis UMC is Welcoming and Affirming Romans 12:15-18; Galatians 3:28 May 15, 2016 Rev. Kelly Love Davis United Methodist Church

Matthew 15: The Canaanite Woman s faith sermon

Mark 7: A mother s faith

Jesus Heals in Response to Faith October 2, 2016 Matthew 15:21-28 Matt Rawlings

GRANT US, O LORD, TO TRUST IN YOU WITH ALL OUR HEARTS Sunday, September 9, 2018 Lectionary Year B, Proper 18: Mark 7:24-37

Walkersville, MD 20 August 2017

power of Jesus Christ in our lives can heal our doubt and anxiety and fear of what is otherwise beyond our control.

7. The Gratitude Channel

1. We re still grieving! What losses have we experienced in our congregational life over the last generation that fill our hearts with grief?

The Gospel According to Mark. Lesson 6. Mark 7:1 Mark 7:37

BARTIMAEUS MIRACLE 12 PRINCIPLES. By Pastor Charles Obeng

Confronting Racism with Jesus. J. Denny Weaver. The Story. The previous lesson pointed out that the church has a checkered past regarding

INSTRUCTIONS. 3. Based on your total scores, place an "X" in the boxes below the letters of your three highest scores.

Leviticus 19: When an alien resides with you in your land, you shall not oppress the alien. 34 The alien who

SERMON Baptism of Our Lord January 10, 2010

But Jesus said unto her, Let the children first be filled: for it is not meet to take the children's bread, and to cast it unto the dogs.

A Change of Heart A sermon preached by Dean L. Francis First United Methodist Church of Evanston August 20, Matthew 15:21-28

GATHERING The Holy Spirit calls us together as the people of God. ASSURANCE OF FORGIVENESS

"Going to the Dogs Isaiah 56:1,6-8 & Matthew 15:21-28 In England today, if you say someone is going to the dogs, you are most likely referring to a

CIRCLES OF INQUIRY: ANNUAL GATHERING, 2014 RADICAL INCLUSIVENESS: GA RESOLUTION 1327: BECOMING A PEOPLE OF GRACE AND WELCOME TO ALL

Overcome Brokenness Matthew 15:21-28

Keep Awake! Text: John 6:60-69 Dr. Stephen D. Jones, preaching First Baptist Church, KCMO July 19, 2015

Seeing Value where others Don t

Sixteenth Sunday After Pentecost

August 19/20, 2017 St. Ann Parish, Augusta 5:00 p.m. (Vigil) What a pleasure to be with you here at St. Ann Parish on this beautiful Saturday evening,

Initial Exegetical Analysis: Sample (created by Christopher T. Holmes)

Roanoke, Virginia April 15, I Belong. Matthew 15:21-28 George C. Anderson

1 Hilton, Scale of Perfection, II, Augustine, Homily 4 on 1 John

Christ and the Gentiles Matthew 15:21-39 (The following text is taken from a sermon preached by Gil Rugh.)

Becoming Ready Harvesters

Sermon by Rev. David T. Young, preached at Hickory First Presbyterian, 9 July Who do you think you're talking to?

We care do you? The Churches say YES!

Spontaneous Praise. Ephesians 3:20-21

Doing all Things Well Mark 7: 31-37

Hispanic Mennonites in North America

KINGDOM CULTURE Be Rigorous in Judging Ourselves and Candid in Judging Others by Senior Pastor Tom Harrison. November 5, 2017

"A Faithful Dog's Portion" Matthew 15:21-28

Spiritual Gifts / COB /

Moments with The Master Series Part #1

NCYM Spiritual Gifts Assessment Gift Descriptions

The Syro-Phoenician Woman No. 257

OUR THORN IN THE FLESH

ABILITY SPIRITUAL GIFTS. Spiritual Gifts are traits that God gives you to build up others to help them know God more.

What s Up on Planet Earth?

Mustard Seed Children s Lesson Summary for October 18, 2009 Released on Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Autumn Worship Growing in Christ Praise Team Led Service September 9, a.m. (Following Readings for Proper 18, Series B)

Who Carried the Holy Cross of the Lord Jesus Christ?

WELCOME TO THE CHURCH OF THE EPIPHANY ROYERSFORD, PA

Crossing Boundaries Matthew 15:21-28 Jim Zazzera, 23 May 2010, Faith Presbyterian Church

Wheelersburg Baptist Church 10/31/04 Brad Brandt. Mark 7:24-37 "What Jesus Thinks of People Not Like Us"**

t actio o VISION n

In the Gospel for this week, just after teaching about what comes from the heart to

Please Pass the Crumbs

Put On The New Man Part 6

BAPTISM AND CST. Introduction

Pentecost 11 8/20/17 Matthew 15: A

religious, he would respond, Yes, I am a Jehovah bystander. It is comfortable being a religious bystander isn t it? I fear that the church that I know

5 I AM I AM I know their sufferings I AM I AM

I Am Not Sure About A God Who Can t Seem to Communicate More Clearly

Transformation: Before and After Message by DD Adams Providence United Methodist Church June 19, 2016

1 Peter 4:10-11 Are you stingy?

Sunday Curriculum Choose Spring 2018

But, aren t there some people who are just beyond saving? That s what Jonah thought about the people of Nineveh.

[123] TWENTY-THIRD SUNDAY OF ORDINARY TIME B

Fr. Molison s Sermon Required: Faith to Get Out of the Boat!

Blessed are the Fierce Mark September 2018 Pentecost +16B Rev. Elizabeth Mangham Lott St. Charles Ave. Baptist Church

Crossing Barriers for Evangelism

3. A Passion for Building Together (1 Cor 3:1-15)

Sermon Mark 7 Jesus and the Syrophoenician Woman Sermon Title: Unexpected Prophets July 29, 2018

Growing Deeper Divided We Fall. Week One: The Bridge Builder 2 Corinthians 5:11-21

Shiloh United Methodist Church. Letting Prayer Guide

Includes Jesus breaks down walls to show compassion to all.

BLESSED ARE THOSE WHO HEAR THE WORD OF GOD AND OBEY IT. He replied, Blessed rather are those who hear the word of God and obey it.

Weekly Encourager - 17 January 2016 THE EVIL SPIRIT OF SCHIZOPHRENIA MUST BE DRIVEN OUT BY YOU - OR SOMEONE ELSE!

Rely on the Holy Spirit

Church Planting 101 Morning Session

Mark 7:24-37 Pentecost September 2018 The Rev. John Forman

SERMON John 9:1-41. our Golden Retriever might just accept it PART THE FIRST: 9:1 As he walked along, he saw a man blind from birth.

Do the Right Thing Hosea 5:15-6:6; Matthew 9:9-13

The Church of the Pilgrimage March 6, 2016 Rev. Dr. Helen Nablo

Pleading for Mercy Mark 7:24-30 SS Lesson for 10/18/2009

God is Already at Work Evangelism Sermon

Lessons for the Leader. People Welcomed Jesus. Session at a Glance. Week of April 1, aApplication Activities Format: Follow the

ACCOMPANIMENT BY THE END OF THIS SESSION YOU WILL HAVE:

Transcription:

1 A Crash Course on Inclusiveness St. Paul s United Methodist Church Warrington, PA Yr. B 16 th Sunday after Pentecost/in Kingdomtide 1 (Proverbs 22;1-2, 8-9, 22-23; Mark 7:24-37) September 9, 2018 Irving Cotto, OSL Then Jesus ordered them to tell no one; but the more he ordered them, the more zealously they proclaimed it Mark 7:6,7 Introduction This morning our gospel reading puts us before two stories involving two people with two very special needs. A mother with a Syrian (today Lebanese) woman with an evil spirit, and a man with a speech impediment. Both individuals were surely ostracized, rejected and most likely had to face strange looks, and the knowledge that someone would be talking about them behind their backs. In the first encounter, Jesus didn t want to call attention to himself, or for people to know which house he was staying in. 2 But, inevitably, the Syrian woman heard that Jesus was in town and she rushed immediately, to plead on behalf of her suffering daughter. The problem she has is simple; she is a foreigner, she is different, her language, her looks, her ethnicity, her religion and culture, her background, everything about her was not deserving of Jesus priorities. On top of that her daughter is sick, she doesn t have a cold, she is according to the times, demon possessed. 1 [or 19 th Sunday in Ordinary Time] 2 Chuck Swindoll, Study Bible, p. 1203

2 And so, what is Jesus to do when he hears her saying, please, cast out the demon from my daughter. There is a moment of hesitation, and where Jesus doesn t act right away. And this is where many of us will have divergent opinions about his response. In fact, the jury is still out as to what was Jesus reason for answering the way he did. He actually, used a derogative term that was used during those times, to refer to gentiles, that is, non-jews. Dog. Except that Jesus used the word, puppy! A domestic, cute pet. But still, a dog. Some people believe that in his own humanity, Jesus responded to the gentile woman with a pointblank answer. I m sorry, I can t deviate from my mission; I can t throw to the dogs the food that belongs to the children of Israel. Ouch! A harsh word and a very uncomfortable image of a Jesus: blunt, seemingly discriminatory, seemingly exclusive. On the other hand, some people believe that in light of what Jesus has been teaching his disciples concerning the importance of a clean heart, over rules and regulations, (as we saw last week), God s circle of acceptance, and hospitality is much wider than our own. And so, the disciples hopefully having listened to the interaction between Jesus and the woman have gotten a crash course on inclusiveness.

Several years ago, I was in Managua, Nicaragua teaching a week-long course for Methodist pastors. During the week I heard many stories of how they came to belong to the Methodist church. One of the youngest pastors said, I used to belong to a mega church in my home country; I was a youth leader, and one Sunday it was my turn to be an usher. A homeless man approached the main entrance; he was in bad shape, his appearance was terrible. I was about to welcome him in, when suddenly, one of the officers said, keep him out, he s not good for our image. Then the young pastor said, that was it for me. I was shocked and could not see myself being a part of such travesty. Shortly after that, I came across a Methodist church. Eventually, this young man became a top leader in his new denomination. In Matthew s version of this same story, the following comment is added, Matthew 15:24, listen carefully, And his disciples came and urged [Jesus] send her away, for she keeps shouting after us. She was an annoyance, and a burden to them. Think about the many people who have been turned away, or turned off by church attending folks; how many times we ve been driven by prejudice, and assumptions missing out on meeting new people, making new friends, widening our circle of human interactions. My wife and I once shared a meal with an Amish family. As soon as I walked in with some other friends of ours, I was asked to sit at the head of 3

the table and say grace. The food was glorious; real homemade cooking. But the fellowship experience of walking into a different place I will always cherish. Many of us have travelled abroad, and have been surprised and enriched by different customs, and different views about a lot of things. And so, the Jesus we see in the gospel this morning, while approaching this woman with a stonewall, minutes later welcomes her into God s favor. He says, For saying that, (in other words, Good answer! 3 ) you may go-the demon has left your daughter. And when the mother got home, she found her daughter, perhaps exhausted after the struggle with the evil spirit, but completely free (v.30). Now what about the man who was also in need of Jesus intervention? Well, if you recall, after taking him away from the crowd, Jesus used a symbolic action which the man and the culture of his time would have understood as having curative properties. Spitting on his own fingers, he touched the man s tongue. (I know its gross, and even disgusting for some of us, but culturally it had meaning). But in order to get his message across Jesus used the culture of the people, however, the healing came through his sovereign word. 4 He shouted, EPATHA be totally open, the entire person. 4 3 Ibid. 4 Guillermo Cook y Ricardo Foulkes, Comentario Biblico Hispasnosmericano, 1990 Editorial Caribe, p. 196.

Jesus is about reaching out to those in need, Jesus is about breaking down barriers, Jesus is about speaking to the human heart in whatever place, within whatever culture, through different approaches, and different men and women because his love and acceptance is much wider than our expectations, our assumptions, our preferences. The gospel story is about the deliverance of three precious and different human beings: a little girl who is freed from spiritual bondage, a gentile woman who is welcomed into God s salvation plan, and a Jewish man whose tongue is released and can now communicate. The man s dignity, the woman s acceptance, the little girl s freedom, were all restored by the power of Jesus extravagant inclusiveness and unwavering acceptance. All of them were the target of Jesus concern. Inclusiveness meant that in their daily mission to spread Jesus message they were to replace a table of crumbs with a table of abundance for all; they were to widen the circle so that all children of God can sit at the table not as strangers but as members of the family. Someone said, that on this day, Jesus proposed that the tables legs be cut so that no one could crawl under; so that you could only use it to set a meal of hospitality for all kinds of people. One day I was painting a red clay grotesque image of Jesus which I purchased in Cuzco, Peru directly from the hands of the artist. 5

As I was painting it my youngest son approached me. He was quietly observing me giving Christ a brownish tone color. Now, Alejandro has a beautiful cinnamon color. After giving the figurine a second coat of paint, he abruptly said, Stop, Dad! Now Jesus looks like me. (show the crucifix) Ever since that day, I have kept it in my home study as a reminder of the power of words, the power of images, and the power of attitudes. We are either bridge builders and nurturers of healthy and loving relationships, or we are obstacles and impediments for the gospel of Christ, and the best of our witness to touch people s lives. Conclusion Out there in our mission field, which includes friends, strangers, family members, co-workers, foreigners, citizens, immigrants, documented and undocumented, the poor, the rich, we are sent out as missionaries to tell people that they do not have to live an existence of crumbs, or with their face on the ground as dogs, under the table but they are welcomed into an existence of children of God, with access to all the riches that God has laid on the table for all of us. Remember what we heard in the first reading: The rich and the poor have this in common: the Lord is the make of them all, those who are generous are blessed, do not crush the afflicted at the gate. (Proverbs 22:1-2, 9, 22b). Amen. 6

7 For the Benediction and Dismissal In science we talk about centripetal and centrifugal forces. The centripetal force is a force that moves our body toward a center (i.e. satellites rotating around a planet). The centrifugal force acts outwardly (i.e. mud flying off a tire or child feeling a force pushing them outwards while spinning on a roundabout). I don t know much about this except that in terms of our mission our evangelism in the world, can be governed by a centripetal force meaning, a tendency to focus on ourselves, our kind, our circle, or we can be governed by a centrifugal force, meaning a commitment to go beyond our immediate zone of comfort and meet new people, and show them Christ in our words, and in our actions. (This week pray for 5 people you are drawn to because they are willing to listen, or you feel comfortable with and pray for another 5 you stay away from due to rejection or resistance). But in each case let us pray that our hearts are open, receptive and welcoming.