We live in an age of polarization.
Our politics has divided us
into hardline camps
of right and left,
conservatives and liberals,
deplorables and snowflakes,
“fascists” and “communists”,
and of late,
“women-haters” and “baby-killers.”
Politics is always divisive,
but it seems,
in a brief span,
we have gone from
disagreeing about how to solve our problems
to disagreeing about
what the problems even are.
We retreat into echo chambers,
into carefully curated alternate realities
that allow us to avoid “the others”
while plotting to impose our version of reality
with the force of law.
I believe our political divides
strike at the heart
of a fundamental
human need
to belong.
As older societal distinctions and institutions
have declined in political influence
or social capital,
we have had to find new allegiances,
new distinctions,
new paradigms and mythologies
to help us understand
not only who WE are,
but who THEY are.
In order to belong to something
we must be able to define the edges of that thing,
we must be able to mark the passage
from outside to inside,
from not in
to in.
We have to be able to distinguish
what inside-ness looks like,
feels like,
and in this way
we are able to define the edges
of our very identity.
Looking at today’s readings,
we see a similar dynamic at play.
In Acts,
Peter is confronted
by those who think that Peter,
who is Jewish,
ought not to eat with Gentiles.
Conquered over and over again,
the Jewish people had defined
and maintained their identity
by drawing hard lines
between those who were Jewish
and those who were not Jewish.
Those who were not Jewish,
but wanted to worship the God of the Jews
were welcome to come to the temple to pray,
were welcome to keep the law,
and the feasts,
but they weren’t really Jewish
until they were circumcised.
Now of course, you can imagine
how this requirement
might keep someone from signing up
for the new member class.
As the infant Church
began to realize that Jesus
was the Jewish Messiah,
and as Gentiles began to join the movement,
Jewish Christians began to insist
that these Gentile converts
must become full-fledged Jews first
in order to become full-fledged Christians.
So, those who have confronted Peter in Judea
are demanding to know how and why
Peter is not following the Rules,
why he would be sharing the table
with those who are obviously not God’s chosen people.
Peter recounts for his accusers
a vision,
in which a voice tells him
“What God has made clean,
you must not call profane.”
and an encounter with Cornelius,
a Gentile believer
who has his own vision
of a man called Peter
who will give him a message
that will save Cornelius and his entire household.
The Holy Spirit tells Peter
“not to make a distinction between them and us.”
How can we know who’s in and who’s out
if there’s no distinction between them and us?
In our Gospel for today,
Jesus has just washed the feet of his disciples,
and shared a last meal with them.
He seems to do this knowing that Peter will deny him
and Judas will betray him,
and all of them will desert him.
And yet,
knowing all of this,
and having served them anyway,
Jesus says,
“Just as I have loved you,
love one another.
And by this,
everyone will know
that you are my disciples.”
Jesus gives his disciples a new commandment
by which to distinguish themselves.
Love each other.
That’s it.
Love each other,
and everyone will know that you are my disciples.
Jesus draws a line
an identifier,
a guidepost,
a mile marker.
Jesus says,
those who love each other,
those are my disciples.
Those who don’t love each other,
not my disciples.
Finally!!
Some criterion,
some measure of belonging.
Peter’s vision that nothing is profane,
Cornelius’ vision that the Gentiles have the Spirit too,
John the Revelator’s vision
of God making a tabernacle of the whole universe,
Jesus making love the hallmark of his disciples;
All these things define the edges of the gospel message.
The Church,
Jesus’ disciples,
Christians,
whatever the moniker,
our belonging is defined by who we include,
not by who we exclude.
Where we are inclined build a wall,
the church must build a door.
Where we mark a boundary,
the church must see a threshold.
Where we want to distinguish between them and us
the church must see only Christ,
the Alpha and the Omega,
the beginning and the end.
We must come to this table,
to the Eucharist,
to this bread and wine
this Body and Blood,
to realize that
finally,
God makes no distinction between
the physical world
and the spiritual world.
All things come from God,
All things are filled with God,
and all things will return to God.
The divisions and distinctions we create
may serve some purpose in this life,
may even meet some fundamental human need,
but we are moving toward a future
in which even the boundary between life and death,
the beginning and the end,
will pass away.
God in Jesus is calling us
to make no distinctions between ourselves,
to see our boundaries
not as the limits of our belonging,
but as the unfinished edges of a work in progress.
The church must choose advocacy over aversion,
intercession over introversion,
and repentance over repulsion,
finding those with whom we disagree
are still our neighbors.
The church must amplify cries for justice,
even when we are embarrassed by their indictment,
even when they challenge our hegemony,
even when they require more of us
that we think is possible.
Beloved,
our belonging is not defined or determined
by politics and party
but by a God of unbounded compassion
and measureless grace
who fills us with the Spirit
and bids us love as we have been loved.
We may find disagreement among us,
as the early church did.
But our divisions
do not create a smaller circle,
rather
like fish and loaves,
what we divide,
God multiplies.
Our divisions and distinctions
expose the vastness
and inclusivity of a God
who calls us to love our enemies
because God already does.
In Jesus,
God in Christ became the other,
made all the thems into us-es,
calling disciples to make no distinctions
between them and us,
between sacred and profane,
until there is no other,
and in the end,
there will be nothing but God,
the Alpha and the Omega,
the beginning and the end.
In the end,
there will be nothing but love.
Until then,
until all distinction has ended,
and all things have been made new,
let your life
and your faith
and your politics
be defined
by love.
Amen.