Urbanites and suburbanites might have very different definitions of a “neighborhood,” but both daydream about the gladed landscapes and bucolic beauty of a truly rural setting.
Who wouldn’t like to “get away from it all” for a while?
Who wouldn’t want to experience a refreshing dose of peace and quiet?
Who wouldn’t prefer a two lane gravel road instead of an eight lane “freeway” parking lot?
Who wouldn’t trade fields of green for acres of asphalt?
The only problem with this rural respite is that we really cannot ever “get away from it all” anymore. We always “take it with us.” In our smart phones. On our lap tops. With our tablets. We are constantly connected to it “all” — all the time — regardless of our actual geographic location.
Except.
Except in those isolated patches of the planet where getting connected to the internet is like watching paint dry — an agonizing sit-and-wait period that is limited by the power of whatever broadband is available in that area. The endlessly blinking cursor on pc’s, or the ceaselessly “spinning wheel of death” on Macs, advertises that we aren’t connected to anything or anyone “yet” and might not be ever.
If it takes longer than five seconds to connect, to get online or get access to any website, we go into meltdown mode.
Repeating commands.
Refreshing.
Re-entering.
Re-booting.
If there is any yet undeclared “endangered species,” it would have to be the human attention span. We need online and we need it right now. We pay big bucks in order to slice away seconds. Super satellite hook-ups or muscle-bound bandwidths are the new gold standard. We cannot sit and wait while information is downloaded. We cannot live with a weak or wavering signal. We crave full power and instant access to the online world all the time — wherever we are.
Jesus’ mission and ministry was also all about trying to connect disciples to a new world. Of course, Jesus wasn’t trying to get his followers booted-up onto the “world-wide-web” that we know. In fact, “www” is the equivalent of 666 in Hebrew. The Hebrew and Greek alphabet does not have separate characters or alphabets for numbers and letters. Letters are also used as numbers. So each letter is a numerical value. The Hebrew equivalent of our "w" is the letter "vav" or "waw". The numerical value of vav is 6. So the English "www" transliterated into Hebrew is "vav vav vav", which numerically is 666.
Jesus wasn’t connecting people to channel 666. Jesus was preaching and teaching and healing in order to connect disciples to the transforming power of the kingdom of God. This was a world-wide-web of repentance, redemption, and resurrection. Whom do you channel the channels of this world and its domains of politics and economics, or the channels of the kingdom?
But to connect to the glory of this kingdom, to become a faithful disciple, takes some broadening of our wavelengths and horizons. Would-be disciples need to increase their “bandwidth” in order to connect to the heart of the gospel Jesus was preaching. Would-be disciples need to broaden their beings in order to become access sites, portals, for those seeking forgiveness and faith.
In this week’s gospel text Jesus challenges his disciples to act on their faith, even if it seems as small as a “mustard seed,” and then to increase it. “Mustard seed” faith might look small and unimpressive. But it has un-bounded power. In fact, mustard seed-sized faith increases the “bandwidth” of any disciple exponentially.
Discipleship formation is . . . increasing the soul’s bandwidth to perceive, receive and conceive Jesus. That’s why we’re here, and why we gather you in before sending you out. The church is in the business of discipleship formation . . . increasing the soul’s bandwidth to perceive, receive and conceive Jesus.
Notice in the mission statement Jesus gave us — “Go into all the world and make disciples of all cultures” – that it’s heart is NOT “win others to Christ” or “feed the poor.” Its heart is “form followers” or “build faith in disciples.” When we make disciples, those disciples will lift up Christ with their words and works.
Disciples whose faith offers forgiveness and fellowship instead of judgment and revenge, do so because they increased their kingdom bandwidth. It takes a soul that has been expanded by faith to perceive, receive, and conceive Jesus to act as a powerful, high-speed connection for those who are searching for God’s love and acceptance.
In this week’s gospel text the disciples do, at least, appear to finally (but not fully) “perceive” their need for Jesus. They begin to “perceive” their “Lord” to be the source and sustenance for their growing but still less than mustard seed-sized faith. Following Jesus “on the road,” hearing his words, witnessing the miracles he performed, feeling the power of his presence, all these experiences have managed to increase the “perceptive” bandwidth of the disciples’ souls. They do recognize and feel their neediness, and they acknowledge the ultimate source from which they must turn to for a stronger, fuller signal of the Holy Spirit — Jesus. This is the first layer of discipleship formation: perceive Jesus.
Once disciples “perceive” their need for Christ, however, they must be willing to “receive” the transforming power of the Spirit Jesus offers. Receiving that Spirit requires disciples to profoundly broaden their behavioral bandwidth. They are expected to offer forgiveness and welcome to confessed sinners — even if they sin and confess and repent seven times a day!!
How many chances do you give a badly behaving child to “shape up” before you “lower the boom?” How many missed papers and failed tests do students get before they get the boot? How many screw-ups, meltdown, or full-on failures do employees get before being fired? Seven per day?
Not likely. Jesus is calling for a level of forgiveness — a level of acceptance — that far outweighed any previous standard in the first century, and that far outweighs any level of forgiveness in the twenty-first century world. To “receive” a broader bandwidth of discipleship sets one up to receive repeated knocks upside the head. To “receive” Jesus’ commandments and to act upon them is the second layer of discipleship formation.
But if we truly want to be a “broadband disciple” there is a third layer of commitment that must inform faithfulness. Disciples must not only perceive Jesus and receive Jesus’ message. Disciples must also “conceive” Jesus — that is, birth the Spirit of Christ again and again, “seven times a day,” into a “www” world that is barren of faith and off-line from the power of love and forgiveness.
We are not summoned to mimic Christ, but to manifest Christ. We are not called to be “Christ-like,” but “Christ-alive,” a vessel for the resurrecting presence and power of Christ in our world. For too many people out there, a Christian’s arm around the shoulder is really a slap in the face, a hand across the throat, or some fingers in the back-pocket. We are not conceiving Jesus, but conceptions about him.
In other words, the story of our lives as broadband disciples is not some riff or rip-off story. We are to BE the story of Jesus. Our lives are to BE the gospel text. After all, the church told the Jesus story for at least forty years without texts. What broadband disciples are pointing people towards with our lives is not more points, but a relationship with . . . Jesus.
God’s first fiat? Let there be light.
Every time we conceive, we bring beauty to life, we are recreating that first fiat: “Let there be light.” We are conceiving the Light of the World. When we conceive Jesus, and bringing him to life in the world, we are conceiving
The Light of the World
The Bread of the World
The Gate
The True Vine
The Living Water
The Good Shepherd
The Chief Cornerstone
The Lily of the Valley
The Bright and Morning Star
“God is waiting eternally to be born in each of us,” Meister Eckhart wrote. And in another place he put it more picturesquely: “From all eternity God lies on a maternal bed giving birth. The Essence of God is birthing.”
Will you “perceive, receive, and conceive Christ” for the world this week?
Christ is born in you . . . when you conceive food at a soup kitchen for the homeless
Christ is born in you . . . when you conceive a student who loves learning because of your mentoring
Christ is born in you . . . when you conceive a little-league team that takes shape from your coaching
Christ is born in you . . . when you conceive hospitality for a stranger
Christ is born in you . . . . when you email greeting to your friends when it’s not their birthday
Christ is born in you . . . when conceive a smile by saying thank you at the slightest provocation
COMMENTARY
From the moment we enter kindergarten we are told that if we work hard, follow the rules, keep looking ahead, and set goals, we will be rewarded. Good grades in high school will get us into a good college. Graduate at the top of the class and we will get a good job. Work hard, keep our noses to the grindstone and a better position and a bigger paycheck will come our way. Politically we may live in a democracy, but personally and professionally, we want to live in a meritocracy.
In this week’s gospel text Jesus continues with the series of stories and sayings that began in 13:10, interrupting the flow of Luke’s journeying-to-Jerusalem motif. In verse 11 he will once again be “on the way.” But in this week’s concluding lessons, Jesus describes to his disciples how differently the kingdom will operate from accepted worldly ways. In 17:1-4 Jesus outlines how he expects his disciples to behave when faced with the stumbling and shortcomings of others. Instead of revenge or retribution, any and all of those who genuinely seek repentance must be forgiven and formally welcomed back into the fold of the faithful. No matter how many failures a community member might rack up, even “seven times a day,” forgiveness and fellowship must be offered each time.
The demand for this unprecedented behavior poses such a challenge to Jesus’ disciples that they turn to him in dismay and ask him to “increase our faith.” In a rare moment of honest insight into their own limitations, the disciples look outside their own abilities and ask their “Lord” to “add faith to us.” They anticipate that behaving correctly towards “little ones” and sinners will take a mega-dose of super-faith, a special anointing from “the Lord” himself.
But while the disciples are right in looking to Jesus as the ultimate source of their faithfulness, they are wrong about the necessarily superlative, eye-catching nature of that faith. On the contrary, Jesus replies, all they need is faith “the size of a mustard seed” to accomplish tremendous feats. Jesus declares that a command uttered with just a mustard seed-sized faith would be enough to cause the notoriously deep-rooted mulberry tree (“sycamine”) to loose itself from the earth and plant itself “in the sea”(v.6). Genuine faith in Jesus’ mission and in the coming kingdom, not some special infusion of super-faith, is what disciples are to use to fuel their actions and attitudes.
Jesus continues to describe just what discipleship entails. At first reading, Jesus’ description of the master/slave (“doulos”) relationship sounds very un-Jesus-like. Instead of the surprisingly “last goes first, first goes last” kingdom hierarchy he has been teaching, the relationship described in vss. 7-10 sound like the weary way of the world. The master is in charge. The slave is, indeed, a slave, and a slave who is expected to be working continually for the master and never invited to sit at the master’s table.
The household master/slave relationship is one of Luke’s signature images (see 12:35-40, 42-48; 13:25-27; 14:16-24; 16:1-13). As uncomfortable as it makes us today, it was comfortably familiar to his first-century audience. The traditional and accepted master/slave relationship described by Jesus, and used here as an example of faithful discipleship, is found only in Luke’s gospel.
What helps to clarify Jesus’ unsettling description of the traditional master/slave interaction is the fact that throughout this section of parables and lessons (13:10-17:10), Jesus has been addressing two audiences. Sometimes he speaks directly to the cranky, carping Pharisees. Sometimes the target for his words are his own cranky, carping disciples. Yet Luke’s text suggests that whichever group is “officially” being addressed, the other group is listening from the sidelines. When Jesus challenges the attitudes of the Pharisees, the disciples are meant to “overhear.” When Jesus instructs his faithful followers on the requirements for discipleship and kingdom behavior, the Pharisees are eavesdropping and engaging. The economy of the first century was built on slave labor, so it would have been as normal for Jesus to use master/slave images as for us to use shopping stories.
Jesus is speaking to both those who believe his words and to those who belittle his words. Behaving, believing and belonging as disciples is not about earning rewards, or even receiving a “thank you” for remaining faithful. In the first-century hierarchy of social status relationships, to offer a “thank you” to another put one into a state of indebtedness to the one being thanked. In Jesus’ example, if the master would have “thanked” his servant for “doing what was commanded” (v.9), the master would then have been socially “indebted” to his slave — an obviously ludicrous situation.
Jesus’ point to his disciples is that as disciples, as emissaries of the kingdom, plenipotentiaries of the Prince of Peace, we are expected to behave as servants of that kingdom: i.e. sheltering the “little ones,” forgiving repentant sinners, extending the hand of fellowship to any and all who sought it.
Such behavior does not gain disciples any gold stars or good marks.
Such behavior does not put them on par with the master, with God.
Such behavior does not “earn” them any early-bird seating or head-table reservations at some divine banquet.
Such behavior is the expected norm.
Such behavior is the identifying mark of discipleship.
Working to bring in the kingdom does not merit some special badges or rewards. Faithfully striving to illuminate the kingdom brings . . . more strivings.
If disciples do what they have been called to do, they are “worthless” (“archreios”) servants — that is, they are laborers to whom no favor or indebtedness is due from their master. The final admission of such servants, that “we have done only what we ought to have done,” is a sign of humility and acceptance of their status as faithful disciples. Jesus will have nothing to do with any status-seeking, reward-oriented, “good-seats-at-the-table” attitude that expects a reward.
Jesus words may have been hard for his disciples to hear, but they undoubtedly made the listening ears of the Pharisees burn.