Today marks one year since my Ordination.
Tomorrow will mark one year living in Georgia.
And Thursday will mark one year
since my first official day as your pastor.
It has been quite the year.
I have spent much of my time
getting to know you.
Getting to know what is important to your names,
spending time sharing meals,
making visits,
administering the sacraments—
we have had 4 baptism in this year,
and we have had 4 funerals,
as well as countless celebrations of the Eucharist,
and this congregation’s first Easter Vigil.
It has been my job to ask the question,
Who are these people of God?
What motivates your giving
and your service?
Why do you value this community of faith?
What keeps you coming to worship,
or keeps you connected online?
It is into this context
that we read today’s lessons.
In our passage from Exodus,
God tells Moses of God’s plan
to destroy the whole people of Israel
for their worship of idols
and to make Moses and his household
into a great nation instead.
Moses reminds God
that this might just make God look bad
in front of the Egyptians,
whose army had just been drowned
in leading God’s people to freedom.
Moses decides to tie his lot
with the nation of Israel,
this stiff-necked, idolatrous people,
instead of taking God up on the offer
to be the new Abraham.
Let me reassure you all
that God and I
have had no such discussion
in the past year.
So far, so good.
The Psalm for this week
is usually read or sung in Lent.
It is a penitential psalm,
written by David
after he was confronted
by the prophet Samuel
for his rape of Bathsheba
and the murder of her husband Uriah.
David prays,
“Have mercy on me,
O God,
according to your steadfast love;
in your great compassion blot out my offenses.
Wash me through and through from my wickedness,
and cleanse me from my sin.
For I know my offenses,
and my sin is ever before me. …
Surely I was sinful
from the time my mother conceived me.”
Paul in his letter to Timothy
recounts his past as
the ‘chief of sinners,’
as the recipient of the sort of mercy
that David prayed for in today’s psalm,
“even though [he] was formerly a blasphemer,
a persecutor, and a man of violence.”
From these first three readings,
we see that discipleship
calls us to humility and repentance,
to solidarity with the people of God,
no matter how obvious their sin,
no matter how dire their lost-ness,
no matter the cost of their return.
In our Gospel reading,
Jesus is becoming quite popular
with all the wrong sorts of people,
and the more respectable folks
who have been following Jesus
aren’t too happy about the influx
of all this riffraff.
So, Jesus gives them a set of parables,
and we have the first two today.
A man has 100 sheep
and loses one.
So, he leaves the 99
and searches until he finds the one.
Then he carries it home,
and gathers his friends to share the tale.
Then there is a woman with 10 silver coins
who loses one of the coins.
She lights a lamp
and sweeps the whole house until she finds it.
Then she calls together all her neighbors
to share the good news.
The moral of each parable
is that there is far more cause for rejoicing
over the humility and repentance of disciples,
or even the likes of Moses and David,
than over those folks who can’t find—
or won’t admit—
any need for repentance.
I think these parables ask two main questions of us.
First,
Who isn’t here?
Who isn’t among us?
Why don’t the demographics of our congregation
match the demographics of our neighborhood?
Who have we lost?
But there is still a second question.
When we figure out who isn’t here,
we will also have to ask,
Why aren’t they here?
Did we lose sheep,
or did we lose coins?
Recalling our parables,
a sheep might wonder off,
and might even feel some since of fear
or loneliness
at being separated from the heard.
When they wondered off,
did we fail to notice?
Did we fail to follow them
into the wilderness
and bring them back?
Did we insist that the 99 of us who stayed
should be of greater priority
to the shepherd?
By contrast,
a coin can neither wonder off
nor have any clue that it is lost.
Have we neglected to value those who are missing?
Have we been so intent
on maintaining the coins we do have
that we have failed to light our lamps
and sweep the floors
until we find those we are missing?
I want you to hear me say
that in the year we have been together,
I have seen your concern for those who aren’t here.
This congregation is deeply committed
to caring for our neighbors,
for making sure that they are fed,
and clothed,
and housed.
Your love for your neighbors
is evident.
Yet,
maybe we’ve been asking the wrong question.
What know who is missing.
What do we need to leave behind
to go after those who aren’t here?
What will we need to sacrifice
in order to celebrate
when they “come home?”
Will we,
like Moses,
have to give up being the chosen ones
to stand in solidarity with our people?
Will we,
like Paul,
have to be knocked off our high horse
to see that we are the reason
some sheep were driven away?
Will we,
like these overly religious folks
questioning Jesus’ motives and actions,
have to give up
our air of respectability
and sense of moral superiority?
The call to discipleship
is the call to humility and repentance;
the humility to stand in solidarity
with those who aren’t here,
and to repent of our part
in having lost them in the first place.
God meets our humility
with the solidarity of Jesus,
who has come to find us where we are.
God meets our repentance
with mercy and steadfast love,
creating in us a clean heart
and renewing a right spirit within us.
God is calling us
to the sort of sacrificial love
and humility that would throw a party
when those who are lost come home,
that rejoices in our own repentance,
and would give up everything
to stand in solidarity
with those who are missing.
To the King of the ages,
immortal,
invisible,
the only God,
be honor and glory forever and ever.
Amen.