I’m sure that many of you
are familiar with the Footprints poem.
It’s very likely that some of you
have a poster
or cross stitch
or plaque
bearing this poem.
If you are not familiar,
here is the synopsis from Wikipedia:
"Footprints,"
also known as "Footprints in the Sand,"
is a popular allegorical religious poem.
It describes a person
who sees two pairs of footprints in the sand,
one of which belonged to God
and another to him or herself.
At some points
the two pairs of footprints dwindle to one;
it is explained
that this is where God carried the protagonist.
A much more recent cartoon
begins with Jesus
speaking the final line of the poem
to the poem’s main character,
“When you see one set of footprints,
it was then that I carried you.”
And in the next frame
Jesus continues,
“And that long groove over there
is where I dragged you for a while.”
I think the poem is so popular
because it conveys both the anger and frustration
we have all felt at one time or another
at what seemed like abandonment,
while at the same time
giving us a mental image to cling to
as a reminder of God’s nearness to us in our suffering.
And I think the cartoon is so funny
because many of us can also relate
to feeling dragged around by our left heel
when it comes to some matters of faith.
Some of us
have walked away from church,
if not the faith,
at one point in our lives,
and yet here we are,
still attending church regularly,
even if it’s in our pajamas
and we’re staring at a tiny screen.
Something
or someone
dragged us back here,
some of us passively,
some of us clawing to get loose.
But here we are,
still on the rolls,
still in the faith,
even if we are dubious
of some of the church’s teachings,
or only here out of some habit we formed
to please someone else.
Whether you relate more to the poem
or to the cartoon,
each of us is here,
listening to and participating in this service,
because,
like the Greeks in our gospel reading,
we wish to see Jesus.
We long for
some proof of this abiding presence
that Jesus promises us,
and the longer we see just one set of tracks
the harder it is to feel carried along.
Especially
when those tracks
look an awful lot
like my own shoes.
In our gospel reading,
John says
that “some Greeks”
come to Philip,
one of the disciples
and say,
“We want to see Jesus.”
Philip goes to another disciple,
Nathaniel,
and they both take the request to Jesus.
These Greeks
are likely Gentiles
who have begun to follow the Jewish customs
and worship the God of Israel,
but haven’t received circumcision,
so they have remained sort of pseudo-Jewish.
Philip and Nathaniel
seem unsure about including these marginal folks
in the movement.
After all,
if Jesus is the Messiah,
he’s the Jewish Messiah,
come to free Israel from Roman occupation,
and these Greeks are only here
because of the Greek occupation.
Can they be included
in what Jesus is doing?
Maybe these Greeks
are having that
one-set-of-footprints feeling
and they need a little assurance
that they are being carried too.
“Do we Greeks
really need to cut off a piece of our flesh,
to alter our bodies,
just to fit into the promise God made?
“And what about the Greek women,
who weren’t even born with the anatomy
that God seems to need to alter
in order to be included?
“What is wrong with the way we were born?”
“Can his promises be for us?”
Philip and Nathaniel take the request to Jesus.
And Jesus answers.
“Unless a grain of wheat
falls into the earth and dies
it remains a single grain;
but if it dies,
it bears much fruit.
Those who love their life
will lose it,
and those who hate their life in this world
will keep it for eternal life.
Whoever serves me
will follow me,
and where I am,
there will my servant be also.
Whoever serves me,
the Father will honor.”
Jesus goes on to predict his death,
and his resurrection and ascension,
promising that
when he is lifted up from the earth
he will draw all people to himself.
Jesus makes the cross
the mark of the new covenant
God is making with all people
through Jesus,
Jews and Gentiles.
As Jeremiah says,
No longer shall they teach one another,
or say to each other,
"Know the LORD,"
for they shall all know me,
from the least of them to the greatest.
When the Son of Man is lifted up
we will see in the cross
the sign of God’s covenant,
God’s solidarity with human suffering,
God’s power to redeem us from death,
and to raise us up with Jesus.
God has included the horror and tragedy of the cross
in God’s plan to redeem us
and God has transcended the horror and tragedy of the cross
in the resurrection and ascension.
This is the promise of our baptism,
that in this water,
God has made your life,
your suffering,
your sin,
your death,
God’s own.
You want to see Jesus?
Look at your own feet.
There is a single set of footprints
because God has borne the cross in you.
God has claimed your life,
your suffering,
your exclusion,
your sorrow,
your pain,
your very sense of god-forsakenness
as God’s own,
in the cross,
and has made the cross your own in Baptism,
whereby God includes the horror and tragedy of your own life
and transcends it
by bringing resurrection and ascension to bear
in your very life.
Here and now!!
This is what Jesus means by eternal life,
the cross, resurrection, and ascension
coming to bear in your very life.
And that long groove?
When Jesus says in the NRSV
“I will draw all people to myself”
the original language says
“I will drag all people to myself.”
Jeremiah says a day is coming
when all will know the Lord,
and Jesus promises
that when he is lifted up from the earth
he will drag all people to himself.
You want to see Jesus?
Beloved,
look at your own feet.
St. Teresa of Avila,
a 16th century mystic,
reminds us that because of the cross, resurrection, and ascension
Christ has no body now but yours,
no hands, no feet on earth but yours.
Yours are the eyes with which he sees,
yours are the feet with which he walks,
yours are the hands with which he blesses all the world.
Yours are the feet with which he walks
and those who wish to see Jesus
will see him in you.
And no matter how far you run,
no matter who or what tries to keep you out,
Jesus has already been lifted up
and he will drag all people to himself.
Amen.