I have to admit
that one of the things I appreciate
about the lectionary,
the prescribed set of readings
we hear in worship each week,
is that they force me to address passages
I would otherwise avoid.
Passages I would assume you have heard
hundreds, if not thousands
of times.
Passages that seem more suited
to proof text and pretext
when taken out of their context.
Passages that show up on bumper stickers,
door hangers,
decorative plaques;
embroidered and cross-stitched
onto pillows and framed samples.
The lectionary forces me to deal with passages
that read like a VBS theme pack,
complete with the plastic sword and shield,
and a stirring rendition of “I’m in the Lord’s Army.”
Passages that talk about
the “cosmic powers of this present darkness,”
and “spiritual forces of evil.”
As a Lutheran,
I might shy away from choosing
as the text for my preaching
passages that demand
“choose this day whom you will serve,”
or passages where Jesus says
“no one can come to me
unless it is granted by the Father.”
But here we are,
reading in one Sunday
three passages I would have avoided.
Don’t get me wrong;
I don’t mean to say
that there is anything wrong with these passages,
or that they aren’t scripture, or something.
Rather,
I have two main concerns
reading such passages
in the setting of public worship.
First,
The reading from Joshua
and the reading from Ephesians
are favorite passages for the proof-texters
and the pretexters.
Like indigenous artifacts,
these passages have been wrenched from their original context
and displayed like trophies
or historical curiosities,
becoming virtually meaningless
and therefore susceptible to projection,
revisionism,
and appropriation.
Like an Egyptian sarcophagus in the British Museum,
or a Confederate memorial on public property,
these passages have been in this new context so long,
it becomes difficult for the preacher
to convince you
that just because that’s always the context you’ve known
does not mean that’s the original context.
Second,
I fear that in reading these passages
the ‘bad news’ is so easy to hear
and the ‘good news’ so muted
that you’ll be lost in rumination
and despair
when I tell you the good news.
And there is good news.
So stay with me.
It is true that these passages
call us to sacrifice, to service, to endurance,
even to a kind of battle-readiness.
And if you’ve normally heard these passages
from the proof-texters and pretexters,
then you,
like I do,
may bristle at their reading,
may resent the call to sacrifice,
may avoid the idea of service,
you may want to give up instead of endure,
may scoff at the notion of a test of faith.
You likely have believed—
or at least you once believed—
and you were confused when your belief
didn’t protect you,
didn’t make you immune to loss
or grief,
didn’t prevent your divorce
or that diagnosis.
And maybe you thought,
“What good is faith
if I still have to suffer
hardship, pain, and death?”
Unfortunately,
like any one of these passages
the word we translate as ‘faith’
has often been taken out of context
and misused.
The word we often translate as faith
is actually better translated as ‘faithfulness,’
as ‘fidelity.’
In her book,
The Awakened Brain,
Dr. Lisa Miller suggests another word
that I think we might use:
resilience.
Dr. Miller,
a researcher in the field of spirituality
and neuropsychology,
suggests that those who have a regular spiritual practice
strengthen the portions of the brain
that help us to avoid rumination,
guarding us from despair, disillusionment,
discouragement and discontentment;
in a word,
individuals with a lived spirituality
demonstrate a greater resilience
in times of stress and grief.
I think this is what the writer of Ephesians means
by the phrase “the shield of faith.”
If we take up a spiritual practice
that connects us to God,
to our neighbors,
and to ourselves,
we are taking up the shield of resilience
to quench the flaming arrows of despair,
disillusionment,
discouragement,
discontentment.
Then Joshua’s admonition
to choose this day whom you will serve
becomes less about avoiding damnation
and much more about choosing
to take up that shield of resilience.
This is the good news:
we can choose this day.
Maybe we will need to choose day by day
or moment by moment.
Beloved, the word for that
is simply repentance.
Choosing again this day, or this hour, or this second
whom you will serve.
Spiritual practices—
meditation, contemplation,
or what the writer of Ephesians
just calls prayer—
are almost always exercises
in choosing whom we will serve,
in choosing to focus on our connection to God,
to our neighbors,
and to ourselves;
and when we become aware that our attention
has returned to rumination and despair,
to choose again,
and again,
and again,
and every time,
as many times as we must.
Faithfulness to this choosing again,
resilience in the face of so many opportunities
to give up,
is what we have called faith.
Mere belief
cannot withstand the flaming arrows
of despair, discouragement,
disillusionment, and discontentment.
Choose this day.
Whom will you serve?
Will you give in to your ‘present darkness,’
or will you take up the shield of resilience?
Will you walk away—
or stay away—
because “this teaching is difficult?”
Beloved,
Jesus is calling us to resilience,
to faithfulness,
to eternal life—
that is, to live the life of eternity
in the here and now.
This life of resilience
is built and sustained
by a life of spiritual practice,
a life of prayer.
These passages from Joshua
and Ephesians
and John
may sound naïve and platitudinous
because we are so used to hearing them
outside of their context.
But the genius of the lectionary
is that it forces us to reconsider them,
again and again,
every time we hear them,
and in that way
we are practicing the resilience we seek.
In the coming weeks,
we will be hearing more about spirituality
and the spiritual practices
that build the sort of resilience
we can call a shield of faith.
Mere belief cannot protect us.
But resilience is like a suit of armor;
it will wrap us up in truth,
it will guard our hearts with righteousness,
it will protect our feet on the path toward peace,
it will defend our minds by transforming them,
and the Spirit will do our fighting for us.
So take up the shield of resilience,
and every time you lay it down,
take it up again,
that you might be able to withstand
whatever the day will throw at you,
And having chosen again and again
and every time,
stand firm.
Amen.