We have been talking for a few weeks now
about this season after Pentecost
which we sometimes call ordinary time.
This is a season where the rubber of our faith
meets the road of our everyday life.
The lectionary is our guide
through this season,
and discipleship
is a primary theme.
Often, I think,
we tend to think of discipleship
in concentric circles of relationship.
At the center
is me and Jesus,
just the two of us.
In the next innermost circle
is maybe our spouse
or our closest chosen family,
those we have adopted as kin.
Then there are those close family members,
then neighbors, and acquaintances, and co-workers,
And most of us stop.
For most of us,
there is a circle beyond which
we feel little to no responsibility.
Beyond that circle,
there are strangers,
and foreigners,
folks we don’t know,
don’t care to know,
and don’t care about.
There is a circle beyond which
we feel we are not responsible
for harboring any sense of obligation,
or even concern.
This makes sense to us
because how could we be responsible
for the whole world?
Surely,
our resources would run out
caring just for own family,
sometimes even before then;
how could we be responsible
for everyone?
So,
then when Jesus says we should love our neighbors,
we hear this call
as a call to extend our circle
to include concern for our neighbors;
like, literally;
the people who are in the houses next door.
For many of us,
then,
those beyond our circles,
those we aren’t responsible for,
are beyond our religious concern.
And beyond our religious concern,
well,
those are political questions.
Those are the realm of reality,
to some degree,
or at least a pragmatism.
Outside of our circles,
then,
we descend into tribalism,
a Cro-Magnon level of jockeying for power,
control of resources,
which are always scarce,
and which must always be wrested from someone else.
Someone once said,
politics is the process by which we distribute pain,
and because we have mistaken the gospel
to be about the escape
or exemption from pain,
we assume that Jesus has no place in our politics.
But if this season
is about how the rubber our faith
meets the road of our everyday lives,
then there must be some real-world consequences,
some pragmatism,
some measure of reality
to what discipleship looks like,
right?
In these past few weeks,
we have run roughshod
through Paul’s letter to the Galatians,
coming today
to the final chapter.
I want to circle back for a second
and pick up those major themes.
Paul writes to the Galatians,
a gentile congregation,
who have been duped by another preacher,
teaching a different Gospel,
seemingly for profit.
Paul lays out his credentials,
even recounting a fight with Peter
for refusing to eat with Gentiles
where Paul was the apparent winner,
as his bona fides in the ministry of the Gospel.
At issue for the Galatians
is the question of circumcision,
and whether those gentiles becoming Christians
must first be circumcised
in order to belong to Christ.
Paul is emphatic,
the gentiles do not need to be circumcised,
because observing the law
doesn’t make someone a Christian.
No,
the gentiles and the Jews alike
are justified by grace
apart from works of the law.
For those in Christ,
there is no longer Jew or Greek,
there is no longer slave or free,
there is no longer male and female,
for all are one in Christ.
And since the Galatians are in Christ,
the Spirit will produce in them
what God desires:
love, joy, peace,
patience, kindness, generosity,
faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.
Paul tells the Galatians
not to allow themselves
to be burdened by a yoke of slavery,
that is,
to become slaves to keeping the law,
but instead to become slaves to one another,
bearing one another’s burdens.
Paul’s letter to the Galatians
stands as a challenge
to our misunderstanding of the gospel
as an escape from responsibility,
as an exemption from pain.
Instead,
Paul challenges us
to bear one another’s burdens,
to lose our sense of tribalism,
to bring liberation to systems of domination,
to reimagine patriarchal structures,
until we are all one in Christ.
Paul’s letter to the Galatians
is a Declaration of Dependence,
as though Paul had written,
“ we hold these truths to be Christ-evident,
that all persons are created equal,
and are endowed by our Creator
with certain inveterate responsibilities,
among these are Faith, Labor, and Love. ”
Paul said,
For freedom Christ has set us free.
Do not submit yourselves again to a yoke of slavery,
and yet,
through love,
become slaves to one another.
If politics is the process by which we distribute pain,
then discipleship demands
that our politics
should look like bearing one another’s burdens.
Our politics
should not be demanding an end to bodily autonomy
in the name of ritual or moral purity codes.
Our politics
should lead us away from partisan bickering—
enmities, strife, jealousy,
anger, quarrels, dissensions, factions and envy
all being works of the flesh—
and toward love, joy, peace, patience
kindness, generosity, faithfulness,
gentleness, and self-control.
Luther said,
God doesn’t need our good works,
but our neighbor does.
Maybe in a democratic republic,
we can reimagine that saying.
God doesn’t need our vote,
but our neighbor does.
If the rubber of our faith
is going to meet the road of our everyday lives,
it must also meet the ballot box.
If our faith is going to be anything more
than a feel-good sentimentality
toward our own families,
partisan identities,
and nationalities,
then we must not lock our faith away
in private spaces,
but must live into a new identity
that transcends nationality
and party
and family.
For all are one in Christ,
and living into this love
will make the whole world know
that the Kingdom of God has come near.
Amen.