Monday, July 17, 2017

Sermon for Proper 10, Year A, 2017

The First Lesson: Isaiah 55:10-13

The Psalm: 65:1-14

The Second Lesson: Romans 8:1-11

The Gospel: Matthew 13:1-9, 18-23


The Sermon
     The parable we heard today, that of “the good sower,” is one of only two which Jesus explains. (See note under Sources below) The sower is none other than God; the seeds are faith; the soil is humanity. You might think this would make the preacher's work easier. Not so. Despite this explanation, I still have questions. A traditional reading of this Gospel would focus on us as the soil, and what we might do to become better soil. I don't think comparing people to soil is a bad metaphor. Though there are things which can be done to improve the soil – to make it healthier and richer – the soil is never perfect. The same can be said for every human being throughout history. We all strive and we all struggle. It is true that our choices and our striving matters. I find these truisms to be reassuring. I like having choices, and the ability to know I can influence things, even if I can't control them. I want to strive to be better soil. It's in my power to do so, however imperfect my efforts might be. Despite this reassurance, I still have lingering questions. I understand what this parable says about us. What I don't understand it what this parable says about God. If God is infinitely powerful, working anywhere and everywhere and at all times, why does the seed God spreads sometimes fail? Shouldn't it flourish wherever it lands, bloom wherever it's planted? And yet – it doesn't. Instead, the seeds of faith fail to thrive. It's the exact opposite of today's words from Isaiah. To paraphrase: My word will not return to me empty. Ever. It accomplishes my purposes. Always. If God's words in Isaiah are true, what are we to make of this contradictory parable? Should it be dismissed as simply that – a contradiction? Or could it be that God is up to something we can't understand, perhaps something unexpected?

     You may know that I just returned to Sioux Falls after spending three years attending a seminary on the east coast. Virginia Theological Seminary is located just across the Potomac river from Washington, DC. I did my growing up here, in South Dakota. I went only as far as Minnesota for college. You are probably aware that there are a lot more people living on the eastern seaboard of the U.S. than here, and in a lot less space. So, when I visited the seminary for the first time, I expected to see miles of concrete and steel. After growing up on the vast expanse of the prairie, I didn't think it was possible for that many people could fit in such a small space any other way. I was surprised to learn the reality was quite different. The seminary and the surrounding neighborhood were not only lined with huge majestic trees but bordered with patches of forest. The seminary itself sits on eighty acres of land and is made up of extensive, rich green space. There's so much space that the daycare kids go for a walk while holding onto the “class string,” all without leaving the seminary campus. The seminary's flag football team had its own designated playing field. So, that was my first surprise: all of the open space and all of the green.

     The next surprise wasn't about the land, but did come from it. One of my classmates, Robin, has a degree in viniculture and, in addition to loving God and having a deep desire to serve the church, is passionate about gardening. (You did hear me correctly. Soon, Robin will be a priest who knows how to make wine from grape seeds!) Now, I've painted a very green picture of the campus. However, like much of Virginia, the soil itself was over-cultivated over more than four centuries of use and was not particularly fertile. Despite the clay-like, shallow soil found in many parts of the seminary's campus, Robin determined we would have a campus gardening club. Though I was interested in supporting her work and enjoyed being outside and gardening myself, I admit I was skeptical. How could this dense clay possibly be transformed into productive soil? But under Robin's leadership, transform it we did.

     Every day, the campus community gathers at the Welcome Center for free coffee – and we need a lot of it to get through seminary! The used grinds became fertilizer for the labyrinth-shaped garden. I expected to do many different and new things while at seminary; hauling large buckets of used coffee grinds was not among them! I thought this was a strange choice of fertilizer. Our efforts, however, paid off when the garden bore fruit (or rather, in our case, vegetables). The location selected for the new wheat garden consisted of thin soil atop of infertile and impenetrable clay. Again, I was skeptical; this did not look like a promising space for a healthy garden. But following many tractor-loads from the seminary's mulch pile, season by season that very space transformed discarded leaves into progressively richer soil. The most surprising space was, for me, yet to come. Because all of the full-time faculty live on campus, we made use of a faculty member's lawn. This particular section of lawn had no dirt to speak of; it was made of clay dotted with hearty grass. This appeared as unlikely a place as the other two, but this time, I was less skeptical. Here, instead of making our own dirt, as we had in the wheat garden, straw bales were hauled in. I had never heard of such a thing. How could straw possible become “soil?” But with a little mulch on top, fertile it became. That garden produced even more vegetables – including sweet peas, one of my favorites, with their climbing vines.

     I've described our success stories. Though much of our garden work bore fruit, not all of it did. Like people, the natural world does not always cooperate with our wants. Not all of the vegetables flourished; in fact, some of them didn't grow at all. The very first year, when we were on the verge of harvesting a substantial wheat crop, the birds dove in days before and ate it all – not unlike the parable we heard today! (I suppose birds need to eat, too. But couldn't they have found some bugs?) Regardless of the obstacle, in a short time we were back at it, planting again, making adjustments to boost the soil for better growth and making plans to thwart the birds.

     I encountered surprising green and growth during my seminary experience. Some of that was a gift from God; for example: science can explain some of the seed's growth, but to some extent, it's a miracle. And some of it required work to bring about. Thinking about those experiences makes me wonder if the apparent contradiction between the passage from Isaiah and the parable of the “Good Sower” isn't a contradiction at all, but rather a statement on the nature of things – the nature of life, the nature of people, and the nature of God. Plan as we might, life is unpredictable and the unexpected happens. Accidents and injuries happen; storms hit. The birds descend and eat up months of hard work in a matter of minutes. People don't always do what we want them to do. Sometimes, we are disappointed most by the ones we love most. Just as those we love must choose for themselves, God allows us that same freedom. Even when our choices – or lack thereof – cause us to fall short, God continues to sow seeds of love in our lives. This is where I think the parable makes an important statement about the nature of God. God knows we will fall short, that we won't always be receptive to God's love or love others the way we ought. The soil of our lives may be too hard, to compact, or too sunny. We may or may not be able to change our soil to make it more receptive. And yet – God loves us anyway. Imperfect though our soil may be, God plants abundant love anyway, in the hopes that it will grow in spite of our imperfections. Just like the sower in the parable, God's love is generous, given without thought of the cost or lost returns.

     I believe that love and that generosity forms the very heart of God. And thanks be to God for that love, given to us generously, without reserve, regardless of our choices, our shortcomings, or our failures. Regardless of anything we have done, or failed to have done, the Eternal God of the universe loves us eternally.

Source:

My thinking about this Gospel was shaped by Pulpit Fiction's podcast 228 for Proper 10A for July 16, 2017 at https://www.pulpitfiction.com/notes/proper10a