A Sermon
for the 1st Sunday in Lent (RCL B) 2-26-2012
Offered by
Nathan Ferrell for Trinity Episcopal Shared Ministry
Texts: Genesis
9:8-17; Psalm 25:1-9; Mark 1:9-15
Themes: the
great litany, the rainbow covenant, the desert fastTitle: For the healing of the world
Welcome to the season of Lent, my
friends! If you were not able to join us on Ash Wednesday, well then I say to
you: Welcome!
Lent may not be your favorite season of
the Christian year. But I hope that doesn’t lead you to under-value it’s
importance. Lent is vital for us, if for no other reason than because it forces
us to face – once again – the reality and the consequences of sin.
I’m going to venture a guess and say
that I am like most of you, in that I would much rather spend all of my time basking
in the celebrations of the Lord’s nativity and his rising from the dead. In those
times when we can sing out that now-forbidden “A” word!
But this is not how life works. Before
the feast comes the hard work of preparation. Before we can rejoice once more
in the glory of the new life that we receive because of Christ’s rising from
the dead, we have to prepare by going through this process called the Lenten
fast.
And we begin today by considering
together the far-reaching consequences of sin.
Surely most of you have heard of the
scientific principle commonly known as “the butterfly effect”. This principle
states that complex processes can lead to vastly different results when the
starting conditions vary even in the slightest measure.
It means that, in a dynamic system with
many moving parts, any number of different factors might impact the course of
events. Since this principle was developed by a meteorologist from MIT, his
thesis was that the flapping of a butterfly’s wings in Brazil may change the
atmospheric conditions just enough to allow a deadly tornado to develop in
Texas.
My friends: this is how I think of the
effects of sin, and this is what our lessons teach us today.
You and I typically think of sin as some
personal thought or action that we each have done.
Sin is personal, and it affects us
personally. But how often do we think about how our sins – our negative choices
– affect the course of events in the lives of those around us, and even in the
entire world.
We are prone to think of sin simply as
what goes on inside of me. It is that, of course, but it is not limited there.
Our choices have a profound effect upon the entire world, even if we are not
able to quite perceive and understand that effect.
Mark’s Gospel states that, after his
baptism by John, the Spirit immediately drove our Lord out into the wilderness
for forty days where a number of things happened. He was confronted by Satan.
He was apparently befriended by wild animals. And he was attended by angels.
Satan. Wildlife. And angels. That’s
quite a trinity of dynamic forces at work – both visible and invisible forces!
And I have to say, as an aside, that I am quite jealous about the wild animals
bit. I love the wilderness and wild animals, but they always seem to stay far
away from me, even when I am actively trying to seek them out!
Now, most commentators have seen the
presence of the wild beasts as a sign of danger. The Lord is thrust out into
the wilderness where he is exposed to the dangerous attacks of Satan and the
wild beasts.
So they say. But that’s not the only way
to read this, and it’s certainly not how I read it.
Far from being the place of danger and
demonic forces, the wilderness is in fact the place where Jesus goes to more
deeply connect with the one he calls Abba and where some of his most powerful
ministry occurs.
Why then are the wild beasts with him? Why
did Mark’s Gospel alone feel compelled to include the animals? It is a sign of
the healing of creation. The animals sense that here is one who seeks to do
them no harm, but who upholds and completes the covenant of the rainbow.
The covenant story told here in Genesis
takes place soon after the great flood recedes and the ark comes to rest. If
you go back and read the story in its entirety, you will notice some
interesting features, like God holding each animal accountable for its life. That’s
a different way of thinking about judgment day, isn’t it?
But the most important fact is that this
covenant, as the text states, is between God and the earth and all living
creatures of the earth – human and animals alike. “All flesh that is on the
earth.”
But why did the entire earth need to be
swept clean in the first place? Because of the consequences of human sin. Our
sin has global, even cosmic consequences – consequences that affect all of the
living creatures of the earth. But so does God’s work to reverse the effects of
our sin. So does Christ’s work of healing.
There’s an old story told about St.
Kevin of Glendalough, one of the great celtic saints of Ireland.
St. Kevin took Lent pretty seriously. He
would spend all 40 days in a little hut in the woods sleeping on a large gray
flagstone, eating no food, drinking only water. Once, while Kevin was lying on
that flagstone with his hands stretched out, a blackbird came and hopped into
his hand and began to build a nest there. Kevin decided to stay still and to not
move at all throughout Lent so that this blackbird could lay her eggs and hatch
her brood. It was so taxing that even the angels came and begged Kevin to give
up his arduous Lenten discipline, but he was determined to let the blackbird
finish her breeding. (Wisdom of the Celtic Saints by Edward Sellner, P.
161).
What do we see here? Just as our sins
have consequences that might affect all of creation in ways which we cannot
quite understand, so it is true that the saving health of new life which Jesus
brings to us also has consequences which affect all of the earth.
Our Lord “was in the wilderness forty
days, tempted by Satan; and he was with the wild beasts; and the angels waited
on him.”
Like him, we do not live isolated from
the rest of the world, whether from human society or the company of all the
living things of the earth or from the company of angels.
Even when you sit at home all alone –
perhaps in the evening, and even when it feels as if you are isolated and
disconnected, it is never true.
There is more than meets the eye. We
live all of our lives in a web of interconnectedness. Our daily actions, our
daily choices – for good or for bad – have important consequences for our
sisters and brothers around the world and for all living creatures. To remember
this, and to take it to heart, is why our Lenten journey is so very important.
May God give us grace always to pay
attention, to be aware, and to make choices for good and for the healing of the
world. Amen.