Pentecost 12C
August 7, 2016
Genesis 15:1-6; Hebrews 11:1-3, 8-16
“Waitin’ for the whales to come… waitin’ for
the whales to come… Been up since the crack of dawn. I’m waitin’ for the whales
to come. I paid my money, and I’m waitin’ for the whales to come.”
This is a
song by singer/songwriter Claire Holley, and was introduced to me by a friend
from seminary. He thought it was such an apt commentary on life: you wait and
wait for something to come, do all the things you are expected to do to make
that thing happen, and it just seems like you still wait and wait for the thing
you really want to happen to finally happen.
As I read
the texts for today, this song popped into my head, not so much as a metaphor for life,
but as a metaphor for faith. Faith can in some ways be the same, can’t it? You
pray, you wait, you pray some more, you read your Bible looking for answers,
you pray some more… but you just have to wait and wait until you see some
response from God. “Waitin’ for the
whales to come…”
That’s why
Abraham is the classic biblical model of faith; we see the height of his
faithfulness in today’s short reading. Abraham (at this point, still Abram)
speaks to God in distress, reminding God that while He promised Abram many
descendants, here Abram remains, growing old in years and still childless.
Abram is getting worried. At this point, Abram is afraid that his servant
Eliezer will be his sole heir. Abram has been waiting for those proverbial
whales to come for so long already, and it’s getting to be too late; and he is
losing hope. BUT, the author of Genesis says, God tells him, “No, Abram, I got
this! I told you I would! Don’t you worry: your own flesh and blood will be
your heir, not your servant.” Then to prove his point, he takes Abram out into
the starry, starry night and in what I have always thought was one of the most
mysterious and quietly dramatic expressions of promise in the Bible, says,
“Look at all those stars. That’s how many descendants you will have – more than
you can even count.”
And then I
think the most unbelievable statement in the Old Testament: “He believed the
Lord, and the Lord reckoned it to him as righteousness.” Abram believed! When
there was no reason in the world to believe, beyond God’s word, Abram believed.
He’d been out since the crack of dawn watching for those whales, and nothing,
but God said it would happen, and so Abram believed.
Faith. This
moment is one of the most enduring expressions of faith we have in scripture.
It is so significant, in fact, that the author of Hebrews used it as the
example in his or her own homily on faith, which we also heard today. It is one
of the most beautifully poetic pieces of scripture in the New Testament, in
which the author also defines what faith is:
“Faith is the assurance of things
hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.” I have long loved this
definition of faith, but in our particular social and political climate right
now, hearing these assuring words feels like salve to my heavy and wounded
heart. On the one hand, we see brokenness, and violence upon violence, every
day on the news. Another shooting. Another case of unnecessary brutality.
Another extreme and unproductive retaliation. Another broken heart. On the
other hand, there is our political climate, in which everyone has found someone
to hate. No one seems to have nice things to say, only things that tear down
others – our presidential candidates, the people who support them, and whoever
else happens upon the path. Everyone seems to be so good at finding everyone
else’s brokenness and darkness, their very worst thoughts, moments and traits, and
there doesn’t seem to be enough grace to go around.
In the midst
of all this, the question that keeps arising for me is: how is a faithful
Christian supposed to respond to this? Not only, how would Jesus have me vote
in this election, but also, how do we engage with each other in the meantime? How
do we respond to each other in our dialogue? How do we respond in our actions? How
do we respond in our prayers? Sometimes, it feels like we pray and pray for
resolution – for kindness to prevail, for God’s will to become clear,
for understanding and forgiveness and reconciliation – and it doesn’t make any
difference. The next day we get up and there is something else on the news that
breaks our hearts, or makes us feel sick. And we keep on waiting for those
whales to come. How do we continue to be faithful in this climate – not to
mention in any number of personal struggles in which all hope seems to be lost,
and everywhere we look is more discouragement?
From the wonderful children's book, If You Want to See a Whale |
Into this
heartbreak and discouragement come these words from Hebrews: “Faith is the
assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.” It is, as I
said, a salve to a wounded heart – encouragement to continue hoping,
encouragement that our hoping, though it may not result in just what we had
planned, will ultimately not be in vain.
This week in Vacation Bible School,
we were raising money to help build a well that will provide fresh water to a
place that doesn’t currently have access. One day, as we wrapped up for the
day, one of our preschoolers came up to me, very distraught. She had conflated
Jesus’ story with the well-building, and thought that Jesus had fallen into the
well and couldn’t get out! Through tears she told me how concerned she was
about Jesus. As much as I assured her, she was so shaken. I told her, “Jesus is
so good, he will win every single time! Even when he died, he came back to life
– nothing can beat him! Even if he fell into a well, he would be just fine.” She
was unconvinced. I gave her a hug, which seemed to help. But I was struck how this
begins even at this early age: even when we do have faith, it is hard to hold
onto hope when life seems dismal. In this 4-year-old’s world, the situation was
hopeless: that well was so deep, so how would Jesus survive it? But Hebrews
invites us to hold onto hope even when things do seem impossibly bad.
But Hebrews is not only about encouragement
to keep hoping. I read these compelling words
from Hebrews also as a challenge,
urging us not just to quietly hope, but to get in there and do something about
it: to give money to build a well, to speak words of love into a world of hate,
to support someone who is stuck in that dark place. Sometimes it looks like
kindness, sometimes it looks like educating yourself about both sides of an
issue and then speaking aloud a difficult truth, sometimes it looks like
getting physically and emotionally involved in a cause that is important to
you. Whatever it is, I believe that hope has the power to motivate us, to move
us, and to change us.
Faith is the
assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen. Faith is actively
watching for the whales, even when it seems unlikely they will ever show up.
Faith is not an “out,” not a reason to say, “Oh, God’s got this under control,
so I’ll just sit back and wait.” Faith is understanding that God might be using
us to bring about the kingdom
promised to us in our Gospel lesson, when Jesus tells us, “Have no fear, little
flock, for the Father has chosen to give you the kingdom.” It’s hard to believe
it, sometimes, when that kingdom seems to far off in the distance. But hold
fast to hope, brothers and sisters: God might be using us to share that news
with others, or to get out there and call out injustice, and work for peace, or
to share love and kindness instead of hate.
God might be using us in any number
of ways, but as we act for and with God, we are also assured that someday,
somehow, the kingdom will come, and God will win. The whales will come. Jesus
will get out of the well. Love will prevail. Meanwhile, we continue to live in
the assurance of things we hope, to be convicted in the things we don’t yet
see. God be with us as we live in this hope and this faith.
Let us pray… Faithful God, when life seems dismal, grant us faith: assurance in your
promises, hope in the things we cannot see, and hearts to work to bring about
the kingdom you have chosen to give us. In the name of the Father and the Son
and the Holy Spirit. Amen.
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