There is a lot of talk these days
about what people believe,
and what people don’t believe.
Some folks
don’t believe in climate change.
Some folks
don’t believe we landed on the moon.
Some folks
don’t believe that the Earth is round.
Some folks
don’t believe that vaccines are safe.
Some folks do believe
that aliens build the pyramids of Egypt.
Some folks believe
that evolution is a hoax
and the earth is only 6000 years old.
Some folks
believe in astrology,
that our destiny is in the stars.
Folks begin each sports season thinking,
“This is going to be our year!,”
each elections cycle thinking,
“my candidate will win by a landslide,”
each new year thinking,
“If I spend this much money on a home gym
I’ll be motivated to keep my resolution.”
Ultimately,
we believe
that what we believe
is a part of our identity,
and so our beliefs can never change,
that they are as immutable as our DNA,
and to challenge our beliefs
is to challenge our very existence.
Belief played a significant role
in my life.
I come from a community of “believers,”
born again by faith,
having heard the Word of God in scripture
convict us of our sin,
convince us of our need for Jesus,
and call us to personal acceptance
of the truth of the Gospel
by asking Jesus to save us,
for as Paul tells the Romans,
‘with the heart one believes
and with the mouth one confesses
unto salvation.’
So, believe we did.
We spent all our time
making sure we believed every word
of our King James Bibles,
hung on every word of what the preacher said,
and plugged our ears to every word
that contradicted either our pastor
or our interpretation of the Bible.
Isolated this way,
we kept our doctrine
and our hearts pure.
We were Jesus believers,
and this belief
had the power to save our souls.
And each encounter
with the world outside our system of belief
confronted us with contradictory evidence
and convinced us that we were being persecuted
by being forced to reckon
with the paradoxical nature of reality.
We thought belief created our reality,
and we were genuinely surprised
when reality challenged our belief.
Our readings today bring us three stories
of challenging encounter.
First,
we have Samuel.
His mother,
Hannah,
thought she was barren,
and begged God for a son,
promising to consecrate this son to God.
She has a son,
Samuel,
she keeps her promise,
and Samuel grows up in the temple
in service to the Priest Eli.
But God is not pleased with Eli,
and less pleased with Eli’s sons,
for their egregious abuse of their power,
stealing from God’s sacrifices
and raping the women who served in the temple.
God calls Samuel
to speak the truth to Eli,
and then to all Israel.
In the Gospel lesson,
we have Jesus calling Philip,
and Philip calling Nathaniel.
Jesus says to Philip,
“Follow me.”
and apparently, Philip does.
Philip then goes off
to find Nathaniel,
to tell him they have found the messiah,
the One that Moses and the prophets promised,
in this carpenter’s son from Nazareth.
Nathaniel is skeptical.
His prejudice rises up before he can swallow it
and he says,
“Can anything good come from Nazareth?”
Philip says,
“Come and see.”
So,
Philip follows Jesus
while Nathaniel tags along.
Jesus is happy to see them both,
extolling this tentative disciple of a disciple
as though they’ve known each other for years.
“Here is truly an Israelite
in whom there is no deceit,”
Jesus says of Nathaniel.
Nathaniel seems confused,
yet polite.
“I’m sorry;
have we met?”
Jesus says,
“I saw you under the fig tree
before Philip called you.”
Now,
It should be said,
“under the fig tree”
is an idiom in Hebrew,
used by the prophets Micah and Zechariah
and the author of 1 Kings
to speak of someone freed from military oppression,
able to work the land
and make a living in peace.
It becomes a phrase to describe those
who are looking for that freedom from oppression
and the coming peace
that the messiah will bring.
At about the time of Jesus,
rabbis had taken to teaching their disciples
in the ample shade of the fig tree,
teaching them of the coming of the messiah,
of the freedom and peace that God will bring.
So,
When Jesus says,
“I saw you under the fig tree,”
this is not a bit of clairvoyance,
a psychic reading,
or a really good guess.
When Jesus tells Nathaniel
“I saw you under the fig tree,”
Jesus means
“I know you, Nathaniel.
I know what you’re searching for,
the freedom and peace of the messiah,
the belonging,
the purpose,
the truth.”
Jesus sees Nathaniel
in a way he’s never been seen before
and it opens Nathaniel
to see Jesus too.
But Nathaniel’s confession of who Jesus is
doesn’t seem to impress Jesus much.
Rather,
Jesus says
that Nathaniel will witness even greater things than this.
If Jesus knew
Nathaniel’s deepest longings,
it’s probably fair to say
that Jesus also knew
of Nathaniel’s anti-Nazarene prejudice
and skepticism about what good
God might raise up in such a place.
Nathaniel doubted Philip’s good news
and slurred Jesus’ hometown,
and yet,
he followed anyway.
Philip said,
“Come and see,”
and Nathaniel came and saw.
Jesus told Philip
to follow him
and he did.
God told Samuel
to repeat what he heard,
and he did.
Jesus doesn’t say,
“Do you believe in me?”
Jesus says,
“Follow me.”
Philip doesn’t tell Nathaniel,
“If you believe in your heart,
you can come and meet Jesus.”
Philip says,
“Come and see.”
God doesn’t ask Samuel,
“Do you believe what I’m saying?”
God says,
“Repeat what you hear.”
It sure seems like
Jesus is a lot more concerned
about having followers
than believers.
It was Christian believers
who fought the crusades.
It was Christian believers
who murdered each other during the Reformation.
It was Christian believers
who preached white supremacy
and practiced slavery.
It is believers
who take the name of Christ in vain
when they espouse Nationalist ideology
as though it were Christian teaching
and claim that freedom of religion
means the freedom to never have their beliefs challenged
by encountering reality as it is
instead of as they believe it should be.
But belief doesn’t create reality.
None of these folks
were following in Jesus’ footsteps.
None of these folks
were loving God
and loving their neighbors as themselves.
Beloved,
Jesus isn’t looking for more believers.
Jesus is looking for disciples,
followers,
whose encounter with God in the real world leads them believe
because they have come to know the truth
in Jesus.
Jesus calls disciples to come and follow,
to love and serve others
as an extension of their love for God.
Jesus wasn’t impressed
with Nathaniel’s faith,
with the doctrinal precision of his confession,
or the formula of his words.
Jesus knew that by following
Nathaniel would find what he was looking for
under the fig tree,
that he would become
so intimately acquainted with the truth in Jesus
that belief would be little more
than the trust one has
that the sun will rise tomorrow
because the sun has never failed to rise.
Jesus knew that faith without works is dead,
that there is no prize but the cross
for those who can rightly perceive reality
and speak the truth.
Jesus knew
that our neighbors need our good works,
even though God doesn’t,
and that in loving our neighbors
we will encounter the unmistakable,
undeniable,
irrefutable God,
and saving faith
will follow.
Will you come and see?
Amen.