Genesis 11:1-9 · The Tower of Babel
Down the Up Staircase
Genesis 11:1-9
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Whose life will be a staircase for God''s descent to earth?

The tower of Babel would seem like pretty short stuff compared to today's architectural wonders. Buildings are now built so tall that engineers design flexibility into their frames, allowing them to sway in the swirling winds without damaging the integrity of the structure. Our cities are so filled with sky-scraping boxes that we have created whole new weather and wind patterns within these steel and concrete canyons. A few creatures have even used this phenomena to their advantage. Peregrine falcons, still a highly endangered species, swoop and race along using the wind currents created by the avenues of towering buildings. They happily nest on the building's rooftops and feast daily on the urban pigeon population.

But not all the side effects of these towering cityscapes are beneficial. As more and more brightly lit skyscrapers blaze like torches throughout the nights, the artificial light from these towers pollutes the night sky. We may not yet be able to build to the heavens, but we have managed to effectively blot out the brilliance of heaven's stars. Stargazing from anywhere near a modern city is impossible.

As the tower of Babel story demonstrates, however, it appears that human beings have been possessed by the urge to build skyward, to move and gain a new perspective, since we abandoned our caves. Perhaps this almost instinctual need to move beyond the place where we are is part of our being created in God's image - for our God is surely a mobile God.

God achieves all this movement through an ongoing process of filling and emptying. P. T. Forsyth (1848-1921) was a British Congregational minister, denominational administrator and seminary president whose social outlook was successfully positive, modern and evangelical. Basic to his theology of the incarnation was the biblical distinction between kenosis and plerosis, or self-emptying and self-fulfillment, the humbled God who goes down to where we are and the royal and redeeming God who brings us up to where God is.

God has a long history of following us and finding us out. In today's story of Babel-building, God descends to the city in order to keep tabs on the inhabitants. God's concern for our welfare finances this journey and the sight of the growing city encourages divine action.

Unlike Babel the rocky wilderness of Luz hardly appeared a spot likely to attract God's presence. When the guilty, fleeing, exhausted Jacob collapses in this desolate spot, the terrain is so inhospitable that he is forced to use a stone as a pillow. Yet as Genesis 28:10-17 tells us, that night, in that place, Jacob encounters God. At Bethel, as it came to be called, Jacob experiences his vision of the ladder upon which angels were ascending and descending. What appeared to be a deserted bit of countryside turns out to be a main artery for a heavenly highway.

Here at the vital intersection between heaven and earth God descends from the heights to be with Jacob at this lowest moment. It was no small stretch for God to reach down to Jacob, a man who had deceived his father and cheated his brother. But God descends and fills the anguish of Jacob's soul with the promise, "Know that I am with you and will keep you wherever you go, and will bring you back to this land, for I will not leave you until I have done what I have promised you" (v.15).

This week's Gospel text propels this divine promise into the disciples' present and into our future. Jesus' carefully constructed reply to Philip's question reveals how the divine presence has once more come down in order to fill up the voids in our lives. God has become incarnate in the person of the Son. The disciples did not need to travel to a Bethel, a sacred place, for God was present in their midst everyday that Jesus walked among them. Although the disciples continued to misunderstand Jesus' meaning and identity until after the resurrection, they worried about what they would do when he was gone. Jesus gives them two replies in this pericope - two ways that they may continue to experience the presence of the living Lord in their lives.

First, Jesus emphasizes that by maintaining an active, direct relationship between our words of faith and our works of faithfulness, we will experience the continuing incarnation of Jesus', and thus God's, presence on earth. Second, Jesus reveals that yet another form of the divine presence is about to come to them. The Holy Spirit is promised as Counselor and Helpmate. Unlike previous visitations by the divine - God at Babel or Bethel, Jesus in Gali-lee - the Holy Spirit's presence will descend on a global, universal scale.

John Habgood, Archbishop of York, has re-examined the most beloved of Jesus' parables, the Good Samaritan. Keeping in mind Jesus' dual emphasis on word and work, Habgood focuses on the continued gift of Christ's presence among us. Habgood first skips to the end of the parable, finding one focus of the story in its last line, "Go and do likewise" (Luke 10:37). Here word and work come together dramatically. The priest and Levite, both men of great words, supposedly representing formidable examples of faithfulness, utterly fail to incarnate that faith. The healing presence of the Lord cannot reach out to the wounded traveler because these men will not act as conduits, or "Jacob's ladders" for God's descent.

But Habgood finds the other focus of this parable, though usually overlooked, an even stronger example of the divine desire to be with humanity. The priest and the Levite refused to venture even across the road in order to help the beaten man. They stuck to what they believed was the safety of their familiar route. Helping the other would have meant getting off the comfortable, well-worn path that gave them a sense of security. As Jesus tells the story, it is only the Samaritan who risks abandoning his prescribed path in order to reach out to the suffering stranger. Habgood's analysis of the Good Samaritan parable is both remarkable and moving. He proclaims:

This is the deepest meaning of the parable - it is about "where Christ is" and where we need to be - in the "no-go" areas of life where lepers live. In this one phrase - "he came where he was" - we have summed up the message of salvation. "Surely he has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows, and is among us as one who serves." (Confessions of a Conservative Liberal [London: SPCK, 1988], 28-29)

Jesus' patient explanation to the confused Philip revealed for all of us the gift of divine presence which we may all enjoy. The God who strolled with us throughout the garden of Eden in the days of our innocence still yearned to join us here on earth. The incarnation of Jesus Christ and the continuous indwelling of the Holy Spirit made this possible, but at the high cost of the crucifixion. Now God joins us where we are, not where we ought to be, for we have a God who goes anywhere to get us, even descends into hell itself, to find us.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Works, by Leonard Sweet