To the best of my knowledge,
I have never met anyone famous.
I have met the authors
of a few of the books I’ve read,
but I wouldn’t call academic theologians
and Biblical Studies professors
famous people.
I think I saw Matthew Perry
in an airport once,
but I can neither confirm that sighting,
nor can I call a supposed sighting
the same thing as a meeting.
Do you know of the game
‘six degrees of separation’?
The idea is that
between you and anyone else
there are only six degrees of separation,
or a maximum of six relationships
separating you from someone else
For instance,
I have a friend and colleague
who discerned his call to ministry
while sitting at the kitchen table
of Coretta Scott King
and talking about the state of the world.
So,
I know this friend,
who knew Mrs. King,
who was married to
the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr..
There are only two degrees of separation
between me and Martin Luther King, Jr..
This same friend met and received a blessing from
Pope St. John Paul II,
which I think makes him a second-class relic.
I have another friend who,
in the course of our last conversation,
casually mentioned that Bryan White
had called him that morning
to see if my friend had any songs he could record
for his new project.
That’s one degree of separation
between me and Bryan White.
I have never met anyone famous,
but I know people,
and I know people who know people.
And to be honest,
I get the same kind of feeling
from all our readings today.
Each of our readings
give us an account of a direct encounter
with the Living God.
“In the year that King Uzziah died,”
says the prophet Isaiah,
“I saw the Lord.”
“As one untimely born,”
says the apostle Paul,
“[the risen Lord Jesus] appeared to me.”
“[Jesus] got into one of the boats,”
St. Luke tells us,
“the one belonging to Simon,
and asked him to put out a little way from the shore.”
Isaiah is grieving the way things used to be
and reeling from his newfound sense of uncertainty
at the end of the 54-year reign of King Uzziah.
Paul,
then called Saul,
is murderously angry at the followers of Jesus
and on his way to take action
that would rid the world of these folks.
These fishermen
and would-be disciples
are exhausted from an unfruitful third-shift
when a street preacher shows up
and asks for a favor.
Maybe you can relate.
I know I can.
Exhausted,
grieving the way things were,
mad at those other people
who are messing things up
and wishing I didn’t have to share the planet with them…
Where is my encounter with the Living God?
When is God gonna show up
and shake the doorposts of this place
and give me a new purpose?
When is Jesus gonna come
and prove the resurrection to me?
When is Jesus gonna step into my boat
and show me what I’ve been doing wrong
this whole time?
Grief,
and anger,
and exhaustion
have a way of distracting us
from the bigger picture,
of turning our gaze inward
until all we can see is our own pain.
And in each of these stories of encounter,
this is precisely where the prophet,
apostle,
and weary fishermen
encounter the Living God—
in the depths of their pain.
It was IN Isaiah’s grief and uncertainty
that Isaiah saw the Lord
and became a prophet
It was ON THE WAY
to murder the followers of Jesus
that Jesus knocked Saul off his high horse
and called him to be an apostle.
It was IN THE EMPTY BOAT
that Simon discovered the Living God
in Jesus.
Each of these hurt,
hateful
and harried folks,
encountered God IN their exhaustion,
grief,
uncertainty,
and blind rage,
and each of them are called to obedience.
The invitation to obedience,
to faithfulness,
to discipleship,
is the call to be transformed
by an encounter with the Living God
in the midst of our circumstances.
Discipleship
is the result of encounter
and obedience.
But,
what if you’ve never had that encounter?
What if it feels like
there are too many degrees of separation
between me and the Living God?
If discipleship
is the result of encounter and obedience,
then start with obedience.
Start right where you are.
Are you grieving the way things used to be?
Then go and share that grief with those who are grieving.
Are you angry you have to share the planet
with those other people?
Then climb off your high horse
and follow the risen Jesus.
Are you worn-out and burned-out
with nothing to show for it?
Then be faithful
and trust Jesus for the result.
By our faithfulness,
by our obedience,
we embody the presence of God.
And an exhausted, grieving, uncertain, angry world
discovers that we and the Living God
are all in the same boat.
Discipleship
is the result of obedience
and encounter.
By our faithfulness,
by our obedience,
we will become the world’s encounter
with the Living God.
Paula D’Arcy says,
“God comes to us disguised as our lives.”
There are no degrees of separation
between us and the Living God.
But sometimes it takes an encounter
to see through our grief, uncertainty,
anger, and exhaustion.
And sometimes
that will take a disciple.
Who else has God sent?
Will you go?