Reformation Sunday
is one of those times
when we read virtually the same texts,
if not exactly the same texts,
every time the observation rolls around.
I would most often
rather preach on the 23rd Sunday after Pentecost
on some rather obscure text from the Gospels
than I would on Easter or Christmas Eve.
I preach about the resurrection
and the incarnation
all the time.
I am running out of new things to say.
And now we have been commemorating
the Protestant Reformation
and the remarkable legacy of Martin Luther
for 508 years.
We have been in talks with the Roman Catholic Church
for more than 50 years—
which is why we are calling this a ‘commemoration’
and not a ‘celebration’—
and we have found in that time
that we have such wide theological agreement
that a joint statement by both churches
declaring our agreement on the doctrine of Justification,
the primary point of division at the time of the Reformation,
is now 25 years old.
So, what exactly are we commemorating?
For a lot of us,
our heritage.
Afterall,
we are immigrants to this land,
and when our forebears landed here,
and set up homes
and raised crops and families,
institutions and livelihoods,
they also brought their uniquely German,
or Swedish,
or Norwegian,
or Finnish,
or Icelandic,
or Danish,
faith with them.
Some of us were confirmed
in our great-grandparents’ language,
celebrating with lefsa,
or lutefisk,
or a potluck,
or copious amounts of beer and sausages,
or whatever Icelandic people eat.
We throw huge Oktoberfest celebrations,
we sing old German hymns
and Swedish tunes,
even if the words are now in English.
We memorize Luther’s words
in the Small Catechism,
even if all we remember 20, 30, 50 years later
is ‘Sin boldly.’
We break out the red shirts,
sweaters,
sport coats,
socks;
We don our Luther roses
and will spend most of the rest of today
singing “a bulwark never failing”
and maybe Googling
“What is a bulwark?”
Dr. Lisa Miller,
in her book The Awakened Brain,
tells us that her research has concluded
that religion is 100% environmentally received,
meaning that religion and culture
are virtually synonymous.
To practice our religion
is to practice our culture.
We receive from our ancestors
and we pass on to our progeny
these cultural exercises,
expressing where we come from
and who we are.
Dr. Miller contrasts this religious expression
against spirituality,
an innate sense of transcendent connectedness
to something or someone
who loves us, holds us, and guides us through this life.
While religion and spirituality overlap
to a large degree,
they are not the same thing.
And I think this is Jesus’ point
in our Gospel reading.
Jesus is speaking to the Jews,
and that word itself
would be better translated as ‘Judeans,’
because it is referring to people
from the region of Judea
who expressed their cultural identity
by being from this place
and worshiping the One God
in the Temple in Jerusalem.
Only later,
once these people from this place
who worshiped in this way,
were no long in this place
and the temple was destroyed
so they could no longer worship in this way,
did the term come to mean
anyone of this common ancestry
and religious heritage.
Jesus is speaking to these people,
who are from this place,
and who worship in this way—
and even though he is also from this place
and worships in this way,
he tells them they might have missed the point
entirely.
Jesus explains
“If you continue in my word, you will know the truth,
and the truth will make you free.”
And these people,
who have been practicing a yearly ritual
where they reenact God’s deliverance
of their ancestors
from slavery in Egypt,
say to Jesus,
“We are children of Abraham,
we have never been slaves to anyone.”
A lot of good all those Passover’s have done?
It’s almost as if the seder begins
“What makes this night different
from other nights?”
and the reply came back,
“I have no idea.
Pass the lambchops.”
Were I to ask you,
“How has being a Lutheran
had an impact on your experience of God?”
What would you say?
Would you point to the lefsa
or the Luther rose?
Would you point to the altar
or the font?
Or would you say,
“I have no idea.
Pour me another beer.”
Jesus doesn’t disparage their place
or heritage,
but Jesus calls them to see through it
to an experience at the heart of this reality
shared by all places, cultures, religions.
The freedom that Jesus was bringing
was larger than any one place
or any one time,
any one religion or culture.
And these Judeans who believed in Jesus
were not being called to set aside their Judaism
but to include their Judaism in a bigger universe
than the one they had been invited to imagine.
Jesus was inviting them into relationship
with the One God of the Temple
who transcends culture and place.
I believe that this is the calling of the reformation.
If we are beholden to a culture,
or a single expression of religion,
we too are likely to miss
the invitation to relationship
with the God who transcends our culture and place.
I was not born to Lutheran parents,
or grandparents,
or great-grandparents.
In fact,
to my knowledge,
I have zero Scandinavian blood,
and you have to go back several generations
to find a German relative.
I learned of Martin Luther
in my World History class
memorizing the date of the Reformation
alongside Johannes Guttenberg
and the printing press.
I grew up in church,
hearing of God’s hatred of sin,
of God’s jealousy and vengeance,
of God’s wrath and terrible recompense.
I sang “Jesus Loves Me,”
and as soon as I could read,
sounded out the tiny plaque on my grandmother’s wall,
that promised me “God is Love.”
But I also being taught
that while God may love me,
that love is conditional.
If I didn’t accept that Jesus
had received on the cross
the punishment that I deserved,
and if I didn’t ask for forgiveness,
if I didn’t ask Jesus to come and live in my heart
to shield me from sin and God’s judgement,
that this God would righteously and justly
damn me to an eternity of conscious torment
in the literal flames of Hell.
Weighty stuff for a 7-year-old.
But the older I got,
and the more of the scriptures
I could read for myself,
the more I learned of this God who is Love,
the more I experienced of this God who is Love.
Eventually this experience of God’s unconditional Love
led me to a break with the church of my upbringing,
and I began to search for a tradition
that resonated with my experience.
When as an adult
I read of Martin Luther’s experience
of rediscovering the Grace of God
hidden in plain sight
in the very passage from Romans
we read here today,
I knew that this was my spiritual home,
even though I am not German
or Scandinavian.
There is a whole movement of folks out there
deconstructing their faith of their childhood,
unlearning the God who is mad and vengeful.
I was lucky
that I John 4:8, “God is Love,”
was written as plainly on my Grandmother’s life
as it was on her walls.
I was lucky to have found Luther’s writings online,
to have wanted to reform my faith
and not abandon it.
But so many of our Lutheran churches
are far more concerned
with maintaining a cultural heritage
that by and large,
Lutheran evangelism
has looked more like colonization.
We have not invited people
into a relationship with the God of Love and Grace
so much as we have invited folks to be German.
But until our experience of God’s Love and Grace
transcends time and place
we will be as bound up in the trappings
of our culture and place
as these Judeans
who thought they were the only ones
who knew where to find God.
So,
what might the Lutheranism of the Future look like
if it isn’t all lefse and lutefisk,
beer and potlucks,
or whatever Icelandic people eat?
I believe it will be a spirituality
that leads people to a language
they can use to express their experience.
Lutheran Spirituality
will begin in what I like to call
“Paradoxy.”
Lutherans excel at non-dual thinking.
We are simultaneously saints and sinners,
bound and freed.
We are beholden to both the law and the gospel.
Jesus is both God and Human.
The Eucharist is both bread and wine
AND body and blood.
So we can abandon language
about what is right and wrong,
in favor of what is helpful and unhelpful.
God both includes everything
and transcends everything.
So a Lutheran Spirituality
will have to unlearn unhelpful pictures of God
and relearn the God Who Is.
For this we will need the Cross.
Martin Luther says that Theologians of the Cross
call a thing what it is,
while Theologians of Glory
call good evil and evil good.
Jesus said that you will know the truth
and the truth will set you free.
The Cross becomes for us
the new tree of the knowledge of Good and Evil,
and we eat its fruit in the Eucharist.
Then knowing the difference
between what is good and what is evil,
we can trust God to reconcile both,
first in us as saints and sinners,
and then in all the world,
including all things
and transcending them.
The truth can only have its fullest impact
in relationship,
because only relationship
can handle the vulnerability, accountability,
and transformative power of truth
without imposition or colonization.
God Loves us by becoming us;
that is,
in relationship with God
we are being transformed into the Love that God is.
Grace, then,
is the way that Love behaves.
We become this Love
by practicing this Grace,
through Hospitality,
Generosity,
and Solidarity,
by making space in ourselves
for our neighbors
as God has made space within God’s self
for us.
We Love our neighbors
by becoming neighbors.
Luther said, “God doesn’t need your good works,
but your neighbor does.”
We need long, slow, loving relationships
with folks who disagree with us,
without canceling, scolding, or chiding each other.
We need church.
We need communities were we can walk along the path
until the path becomes clear.
We also need the church
because we cannot do the work of Justice,
wrestle with the scriptures,
come to faith,
or even live our lives
alone.
We need access to doctors, lawyers, teachers,
community helpers in relationship
and not just behind a pay wall.
We need access to mothers and aunts,
to fathers and uncles,
to elders and sages,
to brothers, sisters, siblings
when we have had to escape
the culture and place of our birth
to survive.
We need meaningful work
and a place to do it,
especially if and when
we cannot do what we love
for a living.
The Lutheranism of the Future
cannot be a cultural heritage project,
inviting folks to be German,
to come and sing our songs
or observe our festivals.
The Lutheranism of the Future
will require us to know the truth
through the lens of the Cross
and to be set free
from all the mighty fortresses
we have constructed
to prevent change.
The Lutheranism of the Future
will be a common spirituality
more than a common religious expression.
So, what are we commemorating here today?
What new thing might a preacher find to say?
Luther experienced the truth
and it set him free.
Lutherans of the Future
won’t be born,
so much as freed—
by the truth that the God they feared
doesn’t exist
and the God Who Is
Loves them already.
Amen.