Some years ago,
I remember being deeply disturbed
by a picture that I first saw
in my Facebook newsfeed,
then in newspaper articles,
and splashed across the TV screen.
It was a picture of a man
and his 23-month-old daughter
facedown
in the muddy waters of the Rio Grande.
Oscar Alberto Martinez Ramirez
and is daughter Valeria,
drowned while trying to cross the treacherous river
to ask for asylum from their native El Salvador.
Oscar went into the water
with Valeria tucked under his shirt,
hoping for a better life,
hoping to escape the violence
and economic plight
of so many of his compatriots
fleeing a place ironically named “the Savior.”
No doubt,
many of you have seen this picture too,
and wept
or raged
or silently shook your head in bewilderment.
As we’ve all been conditioned to do
by our current political climate
I’d dare say that most of us
looked for who to blame.
Maybe your inner thoughts
sounded something like this:
“How dare this man take a child into that murky river!?”
“I wish Mexico would do something about these people.”
“I wish our government would do something for these people.”
Maybe you were a little more bold
and wondered why God hadn’t done something to stop it.
Or a little more bold still
and wondered if this was God’s punishment
for breaking the law.
In our Gospel today,
Jesus and his disciples
encounter a man
who had been born blind.
The disciples ask Jesus,
“Who sinned:
this man or his parents,
causing him to be born blind?”
It was a common belief in Jesus’s day
that sin and sickness went hand-in-hand.
So, the sick,
the infirm,
the differently abled,
had not only to worry about
ill health,
or convalesce,
or accessibility,
but also the moral stigma
of being presumed to be unrighteous
in addition to being unwell.
The disciples’ question
belies several presumptions:
First,
it presumes that God punishes sin with sickness.
Second,
it presumes that this man’s suffering
was therefore
somehow just.
Third,
it presumes the disciples bore no responsibility
for the blind man’s plight
and Fourth,
it presumed that there was nothing that could be done.
Now,
since the invention of modern medicine
and since the tireless work of so many
who dedicated their lives to erasing the stigma
associated with illnesses like
HIV and AIDS,
I am certain that the vast majority of us
have evolved the rather erudite position
that God does not punish sin with sickness.
But thinking back to Oscar and Valeria,
have we not presumed,
like the disciples,
that someone should be blamed
for the deaths of these two people
in this river,
and that that someone
is decidedly NOT us?
Or perhaps worse,
have we exploited their floating bodies
to prove our own ideological agenda?
Have we not asked,
“Who sinned,
this man or some government,
that his daughter should drown?”
Jesus tells the disciples
“You’re asking the wrong question.
You’re looking for someone to blame,
but God’s economy
doesn’t operate on quid pro quos.
Look instead for what God can do.”
In our first reading,
the prophet Ezekiel is whisked away
to a valley filled with dry bones.
The Spirit of the Lord tells Ezekiel
to speak to the bones,
and through Ezekiel’s proclamation
these bones rattle to attention
bone to its bone,
they grow muscle,
and sinew,
and ligament,
and skin.
Then the Lord commands Ezekiel
to command the Spirit
to come from the four winds
and fill these bones-turned-bodies
with the breath of life.
In the Gospel,
Jesus takes spit and dirt
and fashions sight where there was none.
Look what the Lord can do!!
When God speaks,
creation listens.
Bones become bodies,
wind becomes breath
dirt and spit become sight.
You see,
Jesus did not so much heal
this man,
as he created sight where it did not exist!
In the beginning,
the Word of God
spoke all things into being,
and called them good.
In Jesus,
the Word of God became flesh
and dwelt among us,
and makes us members of God’s body
by Jesus’ life, ministry, death, and resurrection.
In the scriptures,
the Word of God was passed down to us
to bring us the faith,
to bring us the sacraments,
to connect us to the Apostles and prophets,
and preserve for us this Godly heritage.
And when we proclaim the Word of God
with our words and with our lives,
God recreates this world in and through us,
whereby strangers become neighbors,
sin becomes righteousness,
despair becomes hope,
need and want become justice and satisfaction,
division and fear become reconciliation and peace!
When God speaks,
creation listens!
Just as God sent Ezekiel
to raise up Israel from a valley of dry bones,
Just as Jesus sent the blind man
to wash away the mud of his re-creation,
So, every baptismal font
is a pool called Sent,
and we who have been washed
by water and the Word
are sent to proclaim the good news
that the God who created all things from nothing
and raised Jesus from the dead,
is working to redeem this life
and all of its suffering.
Where there is no hope
God speaks hope into being.
Where there is no meaning,
God speaks meaning into being.
Where there is no peace,
God speaks peace into being.
Where there is no justice,
God speaks justice into being.
Beloved,
when God speaks,
creation listens,
and by our baptism
God has made each of us
little Words of God
sent out to brood
over our little corner of the chaos
until that day
when all things are made new.
Neither Oscar nor Valeria sinned
that this little girl drowned
in the Rio Grande.
It is not our task to place blame.
Our task is to speak the Word of God
into every valley shadowed by death.
Our task is to speak the truth
of Oscar and Valeria’s dignity and belovedness,
of their right to exist in peace,
of their right to flee for safety,
of their right to hope for a better life.
In Oscar and Valeria,
our task is to SEE
not only the plight of El Salvador,
but the crucified body of the Savior
and weep for our sin.
Our task is to come here to this font
again and again,
to wash and see,
to breathe and live,
to be recreated by the Word of God
until the world can see
the light of God
in us.
Amen.