You may have heard the old curse,
“May you live in interesting times.”
And these are certainly interesting times.
In the scope of our individual lives,
it is easy to lose sight
of the much broader scope of history,
to think that we are the first
to experience some historic event
or to endure the end of one era
and the ushering in of another.
In the much broader scope of history,
things are rarely “unprecedented.”
Historians are much more likely
to echo King Solomon’s sentiment in Ecclesiastes
“There is nothing new under the sun.”
when describing events that
to us
may seem new and unnerving.
But occasionally,
new things emerge,
like the invention of agriculture,
the wheel and axel,
written language,
the printing press,
the moon landing,
the internet,
all of which sparked revolutions,
and ushered in new eras of human understanding
and social development.
Just this week,
the House of Representatives
recalled the Speaker of the House,
for the first time in American history,
an act so unprecedented that,
as the speaker pro temp
gaveled the passage of the revolution,
someone shouted from the floor of the House,
“What now?”
Much of the last 5 years
have left many of us longing
for some “precedented times.”
Today’s readings
are each a clash between old ways of thinking
and new ways of thinking.
In Isaiah,
the prophet gives us the image of the vineyard
as a metaphor for Israel.
In this metaphor,
the prophet describes God’s displeasure
with the produce of the vineyard
and seeing that the vineyard only yields wild grapes,
God lets the vineyard go feral.
Removing the hedge of protection,
the vineyard is overgrown
and the fruit is devoured by wild animals.
In Paul’s letter to the Philippians,
Paul recounts all the things
that gave him reason to “boast in the flesh.”
On the one hand,
Paul uses the word flesh
to describe his physical body,
but he also means to describe
what we today
would call the ego,
his sense of self-esteem or self-importance.
Paul says
that if the Philippians think
they have reason for confidence in their sense of self-importance
that he has more.
He is a Hebrew-iest of Hebrews,
a member of the tribe of Benjamin,
circumcised at 8-days-old,
an expert in the law,
so zealously devout
to his God, his faith, his culture
that he persecuted the Church.
Not only did he know the law,
but he kept the law
perfectly.
And yet,
Paul says,
none of that amounted to anything
when compared to the surpassing worth
of knowing Christ Jesus.
In fact,
in Paul’s mind,
his pedigree,
power,
and privilege
were as good as…
well,
what the New Revised Standard Version
has rendered here
rather benignly
as “rubbish,”
is in the original Greek
actually an expletive
for feces.
We might do better in mixed company
to translate Paul as saying,
all the things he thought were important
ain’t crap
compared to knowing Christ Jesus.
So, he gave them all up.
To use the imagery of Isaiah,
the vine of self-importance
Paul had so carefully cultivated
had produced nothing of value,
so he tore down the hedge,
and let the vineyard of himself
lie fallow before the Lord.
Then we come to the Gospel.
Jesus is still in the temple,
teaching the crowds
and condemning the chief priests and elders.
Then Jesus invokes the imagery of the vineyard,
familiar to the Israelites
as an image of national identity
at least since Isaiah.
But as usual,
there’s a twist in Jesus’ telling.
Jesus says the vineyard
is leased to tenants.
The vineyard produces a crop
and the vineyard owner expects his share.
When he sends slaves to get the produce,
they are beaten, and stoned,
and killed.
The owner sends more slaves,
and the same thing happens again.
So, he sends his son,
thinking they will respect the heir
as a proxy for the owner himself.
Instead they want the vineyard for themselves,
so they take the son out
and kill him too.
Jesus’s listeners are enraged,
calling for the ‘miserable end’
of the fictitious tenants
and leasing the vineyard
to more loyal tenants
who will give the owner his due.
Jesus tells the leaders of the people
that they have pronounced their own sentence,
and, as if trying to prove Jesus right,
they decide to kill the Son.
So,
what does all this mean
and how does it all tie together?
I think I can best tie everything together
in the fact that Wednesday was
the feast of St. Francis of Assisi.
Francis was born to a fairly well-to-do family
near the end of 12th century in Italy.
He spent his early life in splendor,
and had a penchant for fine clothes
and music.
He joined a military company
and was captured in battle,
being held as a prisoner of war for over a year.
When he returned home,
an encounter with a beggar,
a vision of poverty,
and a vision of the Icon of the Crucified Christ
speaking to him from the Cross,
led Francis to renounce his family’s inheritance
and become a beggar.
In his vision of the Cross,
Francis heard the Crucified Christ
tell him to rebuild the church.
Since the church needed repairs,
Francis took this to mean
he should rebuild the actual stone building.
Francis began to beg for stones,
which he carried to the church
and set in place himself.
Once this building was complete,
he completed two more churches,
all while preaching repentance,
and living a life of simplicity.
Eventually Francis gained a following,
wrote a rule of life for his followers,
as was established as an official monastic order in 1210.
The Franciscan order
devoted themselves
to following Jesus’ teaching
and preaching the kingdom.
Like Paul,
Francis gave up his pedigree,
power,
and privilege,
counting them all crap
compared to knowing Christ Jesus.
In so doing,
Francis’ way of life
inspired spiritual renewal in the Medieval Church,
“rebuilding the church” in followers of Christ
instead of actual stone.
His dedication to finding Christ in nature,
his devotion to the Eucharist,
and his solidarity with the poor
are an example to all of us today.
As we consider the life of St. Francis
alongside our readings for today,
what might be the good news for us?
We are living in interesting times.
We have seen the beginning of the information age,
we have seen a global pandemic
take the lives of millions of people.
We have seen racism unmasked,
partisanship divide families,
and our elections process called into question.
The reality we know came to an end,
and we have neither had the time to grieve it
nor the time to get our bearings in this new reality.
What do we do
when our vineyards are producing the wild grapes
of societal uncertainty,
poverty,
disease,
and death?
What do we do
when our sense of self-importance,
our sense of security in who we are,
where we were born,
what we have,
the groups we belong to,
and our moral achievements
all seem to amount to nothing?
What do we do
when our leaders
abuse their power over the vineyard,
hoard the produce for themselves,
and lie, cheat, steal, and kill to stay in power?
What do we do?
We look to our history.
There is nothing new under the sun.
God is not surprised
or troubled
by the unfolding of history.
God is renewing the Church in every age
and starting in the hearts of those
who have lost everything
or given up everything,
counting all things worthless
compared to the surpassing worth
of knowing Christ Jesus.
God is calling us
to look to figures like St. Francis,
like Jan Hus and Martin Luther,
like Dorothy Day,
and Howard Thurman
and Fannie Lou Hamer
and Martin Luther King, Jr..
We look to those
who found the ground of their being
not in a national identity,
a socio-economic status,
in pedigree,
power,
or privilege,
but in the surpassing worth
of knowing Christ Jesus,
and being found in him,
not having a morality of our own making,
but having the very virtue of Christ
by faith.
We can then,
grieve what came before
and press on toward what lies ahead
for the prize of the heavenly call of God in Christ Jesus.
Whether our vineyard is destroyed and overrun,
or we are called to lay aside everything we have built,
or if bad leaders arise and abuse their power,
We are called to find the ground of our being
in the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus,
who has made us his own.
Amen.