I think most of us
have had the dreadful experience
of hearing a parent or some authority figure
call out our whole name.
Not a diminutive,
not a pet name,
not a nickname,
but your proper first and middle name.
We knew instantly
something was wrong,
and our conscience would hit Mach 10
trying to figure out which of the things
we knew we had done
but weren’t sure they knew we had done
that we ought to fess up to
to spare our fledgling lives.
We use whole names
to mark the solemnity of big moments in worship.
We baptized James Reed this morning,
not mama’s little snuggle bear.
We use our proper names
as we make our wedding vows—
“I, Ashton, take you Jennifer…”
Many a Bobby, Frankie, and Tommy
became Robert, Francis, and Thomas
when their numbers came up
for the Pacific Theatre, Korea, or Vietnam.
And when we want to get away with something,
we change our names,
use an alias,
to keep the authorities from having power over us.
In the ancient world,
to know the name of a spirit,
a demon, or a god
was to have power over it.
When Jesus finds a man possessed,
he asks the demon its name,
and knowing its name,
he casts the demon out.
Today,
we might call what Jesus did
finding a diagnosis,
When we have a name for what ails us
we can fight it, manage it,
maybe even cure it.
But in Jesus’ day,
this was the divining of spirits,
naming the collective personality
of institutions,
governments,
religions,
armies,
and determining whether they were good or evil.
We have done something similar
in the way we speak of the economy.
It is not governments,
corporations,
or greedy individuals, then,
who control prices and inflation,
but the Market,
a cold, impersonal force
to whom we must cede control
of our financial well-being
lest we upset the Market
and everyone suffers.
So, despite the Deism,
if not practical atheism,
of Enlightenment figures like
Adam Smith and John Locke,
we have inherited a deity
no less fickle and cantankerous
than the totality of the Greek or Roman Pantheon,
and we must bring sacrifice
so as not to anger this Zeus
in a three-piece suit.
But this lesser god,
is nothing more than an appetite,
a gnawing, insatiable hunger for more and more.
It must accumulate to exist.
Like fire,
it must be fueled,
it must consume
or it dies.
By contrast,
our God comes to Moses
burning in a bush,
and the bush is not consumed.
Our God is being as such,
existence itself,
complete and needing nothing.
God is the opposite of the Market.
When God receives our sacrifice,
God gives it back.
When God creates,
God is giving God’s self away,
sharing God’s very being.
God’s economy
is an economy of enough,
daily bread today,
manna for the moment,
not store houses,
barns,
Swiss bank accounts,
or private space programs.
Discipleship then
is an invitation to participation
in the self-giving life and love of God.
When we give money away
instead of hoarding it
or leaving it to future generations
we weaken the power of the Market
to control us or demand our sacrifice.
When we rob the Market of this power
over our thinking,
our giving,
our living,
we participate in God’s eternal flow.
Like that bush,
we will burn with holy fire
and we will not be consumed.
Naming this evil spirit
is only the first step.
The second step
is casting it out.
We know from the scriptures
that Jesus’ disciples
have not always been successful
at casting out demons.
In fact,
some folks who aren’t even followers of Jesus
have done a better job of naming
and casting demons out
than Jesus’ own followers.
So,
how do we do this?
Where do we start?
We start by refusing to believe the demon’s lies.
We change our mindset
from scarcity to God’s abundance.
This demon only comes out
by prayer and fasting.
So, we pray for our daily bread,
and we work to make sure our neighbors eat.
Second,
we participate in the self-giving of God.
Our giving
is about the divestment of the power money promises
when we hoard wealth.
We have to choose to trust God’s provision
instead of the alluring promises of a demon.
When we pray for God’s kingdom to come
and give us our daily bread
we are giving lip-service to a lie
if we do not also live like citizens
of that Kingdom here and now,
if we do not make sure our neighbors have daily bread,
if we are bowing to anything
that demands sacrifice
and our allegiance
as though it were a god.
There is no god but God.
The Market only has the power
and the resources
we give it.
Emboldened and empowered
by our acquiescence and fealty,
by our sacrifice and devotion,
it is a growing demon,
a swallowing void,
an appetite for destruction,
of the planet,
of our bodies,
of our relationships,
of our very lives.
We can keep this demon in check
by paying workers what they need to thrive
instead of what the Market will bear.
We keep the demon in check
when we choose to live on enough
and give away God’s abundance,
instead of striving for the Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous.
We keep the demon in check
when we are rich toward God
by being rich toward our neighbors,
building longer tables
instead of building bigger barns.
We keep the demon in check
when we spend our lives
to save our neighbors.
God is the fullness of all in all.
The Market only has the power we give it.
So, let’s call the demon by name
and cast it out.
The writer of Colossians tells us to
“Put to death, therefore,” anything in you
that creates an appetite that can never be satisfied,
because this is nothing less than idolatry.
Instead,
worship the creator of all things,
whose image burns in us
but never consumes;
the God who calls our names
in baptism
to exercise power though us,
to call us into the eternal self-giving flow
of God’s very life,
to free us from the forces that defy God,
the powers that rebel against God,
and the sin that draws us from God,
to proclaim Christ through word and deed,
care for others and the world God made,
and work for justice and peace,
which is the life everlasting.
Amen.