It might be helpful
to start with a bit of orientation.
Today is the Second Sunday after Pentecost,
the beginning of the second season
of what we call ordinary time.
The paraments are green,
to denote growth,
gestation toward fruition.
We call the time ordinary,
as in ordinal,
as in the next in the sequence.
It is a season
that begs the question,
“What now?”
And in the order of the liturgical calendar,
Now that God has been revealed to us in Jesus,
now that Jesus has shown us the path to follow,
now that we have followed it to the cross,
now that we have seen that death is not final,
now that we have the Holy Spirit,
and now that God has been revealed
in the mystery of Trinity;
What now?
So the lectionary
returns us to the life of Jesus,
the message of Jesus,
the ministry of Jesus.
In today’s gospel lesson,
Jesus had crossed the sea of Galilee,
landed in Gentile territory,
and is immediately met
with a naked, demon-possessed man
who lives among the dead.
As if that wasn’t jarring enough,
there is a nearby pig farm,
and when Jesus asks the demon’s name,
it calls itself “Legion,”
the name of a Roman garrison
of between 3000 and 5000 soldiers.
For a first century Jewish man,
you don’t get much more foreign.
To Luke’s original audience,
this may have sounded
like Jesus had crossed the Sea of Galilee
on the Starship Enterprise
instead of a tiny wooden boat.
This man,
who is not only a gentile,
but has,
by all accounts,
violated every rule of ritual purity
and is possessed by a legion of demons,
falls at the feet of Jesus.
But it is not his voice we hear.
The demons speak first,
begging mercy,
not for their host,
but for themselves.
They don’t want to return to the abyss,
but would be happy to inhabit the nearby pigs.
And when Jesus has mercy on the demons,
the demons kill the pigs,
and the swineherds become evangelists.
But when the townspeople see
that Jesus has freed
the man they couldn’t bind,
and in the process
has freed them from the legion as well,
they become seized with fear
and as Jesus to leave.
It would be easy to read this
as yet another story of Jesus’ miraculous power,
his ability to heal and to save,
to command demons
and his authority and mercy
over both the physical and spiritual realms,
and to file it away
as nothing more than proof
of who Jesus claimed to be.
But then our question remains,
What now?
If this story is good news,
and good news for us ,
What does this story tell us
about what following Jesus
looks like?
How are we to respond
to Jesus’ work of liberation?
When we see our neighbors oppressed,
do we work to free them,
or do we work to restrain them?
When liberation comes,
do we rejoice to see our neighbors
“clothed and in [their] right mind,”
or are we seized by fear—
fear that this liberation
will require more of us
that we are willing to give,
fear that this freedom for others
will challenge our economy,
security,
or our own sense of stability?
If Jesus were to walk through those doors,
and ask our demons their names,
who would answer?
Would our demons’ name be
White supremacy?
Patriarchy?
Heterosexism?
Would it be
Patriotism?
Partisanship?
Rugged individualism?
Economic security?
The second amendment?
If we were to come through those doors,
who would we be disturbed to find here,
freed, healed, and sitting at the feet of Jesus?
Could we share the pew with those
whose freedom
requires us to face the truth
that we have benefited
from their exclusion
from the community,
from the economy,
and from the life of faith,
or will we ask Jesus to leave
and take these people with him?
Could we who have found ourselves freed
continue to preach this good news
of God’s liberative work in Jesus
to people who worked to keep us bound?
To those who recoil at our freedom?
Can we declare what God has done for us
to those whose fear of change
would reject a God who shows mercy to demons
instead of rejoicing in a shared deliverance?
This season of ordinary time
is not a chance to take it easy,
to relax into our pews
or in front of our screens
and pat ourselves on the back
for having observed all the feasts
and believed all the right things.
The season of ordinary time
is the season where the rubber of faith
meets the road of our everyday lives,
and asks us,
“What now?”
The good news is that Jesus comes
freeing all the wrong people,
showing mercy where we have passed judgment,
and expecting us to love our oppressors
even as he frees us from oppression,
even as he frees us from being oppressors.
So, the question remains;
Jesus has come,
What now?
Amen.