This is one of those weeks
where the lectionary is doing us no favors.
These texts call us to have faith,
to trust in God’s promises.
The texts from Genesis and Hebrews
give us Abraham as an example of such faith,
who believed God’s promises,
and God counts that belief as righteousness.
Then Jesus calls us to “Be dressed for action.
Be like those who are waiting
for the return of their master,
who will come like a thief
at an unexpected hour.”
Most of my Facebook newsfeed yesterday
was filled with fellow pastors
wailing and gnashing their teeth
that they were having to find something to say
about these passages.
On the one hand,
it seems simple.
Have faith.
A very Lutheran sentiment;
grace alone,
by faith alone.
But on the other hand,
faith seems like a harder law to keep
that the whole of the 10 commandments.
We have been waiting on the master to return
for 20 centuries.
We keep praying for God’s kingdom to come
and God’s will to be done on earth as in heaven
and yet,
it seems like the world gets a little more bleak everyday.
We have been “dressed for action,”
but then it feels like we are all dressed up
with no place to go.
How long should we wait up
on this tardy bridegroom
before we call it a night?
Before we blow out our lamps,
put on our pajamas,
and leave a key under the mat?
If it is the Father’s good pleasure
to give us the kingdom,
what is taking so long?
I think part of the problem
may be the way we talk about belief,
faith, and trust.
We tend to use these words transactionally,
as though Abraham gave God faith
and God gave Abraham righteousness.
We tend to talk about believing or not believing
in things like Santa Claus or climate change,
gay marriage or gun control,
as though our belief created reality
rather than reality creating a set of facts
demanding our intellectual assent.
But, despite all the frustration
these passages provide,
there is some hope hidden in their language.
While we have abused and confused terms like belief,
trust,
faith,
the scriptures give us a word
that cuts through the confusion
and provides some clarity.
In the original language,
the word we have translated
as belief,
faith,
trust,
actually means something closer to believability,
faithfulness,
trustworthiness.
So,
to speak of God’s promises,
we are speaking more of a covenant relationship,
not a transaction.
God’s promises
are more like a vow,
an oath.
God covenants with us
and calls us to live into that covenant.
There is no commerce,
to exchange of goods and services,
as though our intellectual assent
to the reality of God’s existence,
God’s goodness,
God’s power and majesty
could be exchanged for righteousness,
provision,
or salvation.
Instead,
God is calling us to a covenant.
God, who is Love,
has vowed to be our God
and to make us God’s people.
So, when the scriptures call us to “have faith,”
they are calling us to enter into this covenant relationship,
to be faithful to our vow,
our oath.
The scriptures call us to a life
that makes the promises of God
believable
by the way we live in the world.
Hebrews 11 tells us that
Abraham’s faith
was not a passive “let’s see what happens”
kind of hope in a future reality.
Abraham’s faith
was fidelity to the covenant,
faithfulness to live out the vow.
God did not give Abraham
innumerable descendants in his lifetime,
but gave him a sign of the covenant
so Abraham would remember the promise.
Like a wedding ring,
like the stole around my neck,
like a physician’s white coat,
or a judge’s robe and gavel,
God gave Abraham the stars of the sky
and the sand of the shore
as a sign of God’s vow
to make of his descendants
a great nation.
Discipleship, then,
is living out our vow
in covenant relationship
with a God who is faithful.
We are not called to trade belief
for salvation,
to exchange our faith for righteousness,
or to swap our trust for providence.
We are called to love.
To love God with our whole being
and to love our neighbors as ourselves.
We are called to live in covenant
with a God who keeps God’s promises,
God’s vows,
God’s oaths.
It is our Father’s good pleasure
to give us the kingdom,
to live in that covenant with us here and now.
So, get dressed for action.
That is,
live into that covenant, vow, oath
here and now.
If you are rich,
give up being rich.
If you are poor,
give up wanting to be rich.
Instead,
live on what you need,
and give away the rest,
because justice is coming.
and if you aren’t ready to receive it,
it will break in and take you by surprise.
In the meantime,
like a wedding ring,
like the stole around my neck,
like a physician’s white coat,
or a judge’s robe and gavel,
God has given us the water in the font
and the bread and wine on the altar
as a sign of God’s vow
to give us the kingdom,
to be our God,
and to make us God’s people.
So,
if you find it hard to have faith,
if you can’t see in these texts
that there is good news in the call to faith,
maybe that is because we have failed to see
that God is calling us,
like Abraham,
not to perfection,
but to progress.
God is calling us
to be faithful
even when we struggle to have faith;
to become trustworthy
even when we find the promises hard to trust;
to make God’s promises believable
by living into promises that seem too good to believe.
God’s Faithfulness,
believability,
trustworthiness is the assurance of things hoped for
and the conviction of things not seen.
Discipleship is our response,
or vow,
our oath,
our growth in faithfulness,
trustworthiness,
believability,
as the result of God’s grace.
May we
by our actions
and our words
live into our vows,
our oaths,
our discipleship.
May we be transformed
in trustworthiness,
faithfulness,
believability,
looking to the stars and sand,
to water, bread, and wine,
as signs of God’s vows
and our own,
so that when the kingdom comes
we are ready to receive it,
and so are our neighbors.
Amen.