Dust is one of those things in life that confounds us a bit, doesn’t it? Think about it. You clean. You dust. A day later, you look, and lo and behold, dust! Where did it come from? You cleaned everything!
It’s as though the world “sheds.” And in fact, it does! All the time. Even you shed. Every two to four weeks, you shed the entire outer layer of your skin. That’s 8 lbs per year!* But in fact, skin is only a small percentage of the dust we find settling on our furniture and floors or hanging in our air. House dust alone is made up of a combination of skin, dander, sand particles, kleenex fibers, insect waste, dirt tracked in from shoes containing any amounts of organic matter or chemicals, carpet fibers, hair, textile fibers, clothing fibers, wood ash or soot, paper fibers, atmospheric particles, and even cosmic dust. Some dust is heavier than the fluffier dust made more of animal hair and fibers. And dust is not just on our furniture. In fact, it often hangs in the air about 5 days before it even settles to confound our tidying routine. We breathe it and it becomes part of who we are and become. You might even say, you are what you breathe.
But dust can be good too! The skin particles we shed have chemicals that protect our world from ozone. Dust is responsible for the colors we see in sunrises and sunsets when the light shines through it. Chemical dust creates the colors of fireworks. It just depends what the dust is made of! But the truth is, we and our world are all essentially made up of dust.
Everything in our world is constantly being made new and fresh, but it’s also constantly returning to dust. Even as we are “dusted” daily of our dead cells, those are replaced with newly developed cells, also made of dust.
Dust is . . .
The worldliness of our world.
The earthiness of our earth.
The humanness of our humanity.
Dust is what makes us finite, limited, bound to the material, grounded by gravity, and rooted in reality--as we know it.
We are people of the dust –or as Genesis would say in our creation story, “aphar ha’adama,” dust of the earth. It’s who we are in relationship to God. We are the created. From the smallest particles of dust (aphar) of the earth (adama), we were formed and inbreathed, so that we may live in relationship with God. And God (Jesus), our life-giver, is the only one who has the power to lift us from our dissolution into mere dust. Only God can raise us out of our dusty limitations and into a realm (or kingdom) of new life and new possibilities. For God is the breath. And the Light. And the Life. When God’s love and redemption shines through our dust, we become more, much more. For when Jesus lives in us and through us, we rise up and get a glimpse of the heavenly kingdom.
We live in a dusty world. As quantum physicists would say, we live in a dusty universe. And even more interesting, we now understand in physics that our “dust” in its smallest particular is made of waves of sound and light that respond to a greater Sound and Light.
Breath and Light. Renewer and Sustainer. When Jesus’ Light shines through our dust, a rainbow of promise and resurrection appears. That’s the reality of our relationship with God.
How well-tuned are we to the sound of God’s voice? How aware and receptive are we of the Light of Jesus in our lives? It all depends upon the state of our dust.
Our dust can either weigh us down or when we see it, it can allow us to recognize our relationship with God. As Malcolm Gladwell says, “To a worm in horseradish, the world is horseradish.” But the gospel tells us, Jesus can help us transcend that muck of the sandpit. Because we are inbreathed by the breath of God, we have the ability to look beyond our limitations, to believe, to have faith in what we cannot see but we know can move us and sustain us. By faith we understand that the universe was formed at God's command, so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible (Hebrews 11:3).
Do we look around us and see only dust?
Or do we see what’s really there---a rainbow, God’s sign of presence, the Truth and Promise of Jesus?
When Jesus asks us if we have eyes to see or ears to hear, he is talking about our ability to transcend our limitations, our stubbornness, our refusal to look further than our own big toes, and to see and hear God’s presence among, around, within us. For when we are willing to allow Jesus into our lives and hearts, we allow him to lift us up into a place of greater insight, greater understanding, greater intuition, greater knowledge of God, greater peace, greater, more abundant life. With Jesus, we get a glimpse of the “heavenly kingdom” here in this life as well as beyond.
We get a glimpse of the truth of resurrection.
Jesus is about resurrection. Jesus is in the business of resurrection. The disciples knew it. Paul knew it. The early church knew it. We once knew it.
Grave to Life. Dust to Eternity. That’s our heritage. That’s our story. We have forgotten the crux of the story: the resurrection. Take out Jesus and the resurrection from the Christian story, you have nothing much left except good moral teaching and a rulebook to live by. That may get you somewhere, but it won’t get you into God’s kingdom come.
Jesus was clear. The apostles were clear. Paul was clear. You enter God’s kingdom by “The Way,” the way of Jesus. For Jesus is the Way, the Truth, the Life. But not just any life. Resurrection Life. Eternal Life.
That’s the message the disciples were sent out into the world to give –Jesus has come. He is alive. Repent! The messiah and savior is here. He is the one to make a way through every waywardness to God’s way of the kingdom. Trust in him. Have faith in him. Your life will be changed. You will be lifted from the dust (Ps 103; Ps 113; 1 Samuel 2:8).
In the Hebrew scriptures, God sends out prophets to make similar proclamations to places like Nineveh, Sodom and Gomorrah, Egypt, and to many others. And the bid is to “repent!” Remember that you are dust. But God is the Light! Re-turn to God and God will turn your dust into stardust and sunburst. God will lift you up into the heavens. Restore you to new heights. Heal you with new wholeness. Give you peace that passes understanding. Spare you your fate as mere dust to dust.
Jesus offers us more than just dust. Jesus offers us the Breath of God, a chance to dust away our sins, so that we do not have to be finally “dusted” and resigned to death but can be lifted up, ascended into a new kind of body and a new kind of life. We can be “re-dusted” with grace by the master Potter who can redesign us in His image anew and afresh.
We are the wheat that remains when the chaff blows away. We are the rock that remains when the sand falls away. We are the diamond that remains when the coal is compressed. We are gathered in because we have the gift of seeing and hearing Jesus. He is the promise, the rainbow revealed when Light moves through the dust. His voice is the breath. His presence is the promise of God.
Jesus sends his disciples out telling them that if any close their eyes and ears to them, to him, and to God, they should “shake off the dust” from their feet. Shaking off the dust from their feet and body was a sign that they had done what they could. The disciples had spread the truth of who Jesus is –the messiah! The one who can turn sawdust into stardust. More than that, they could not do. As God sighed often in the Hebrew scriptures, we humans can be a hard-hearted, block-headed, stiff-necked people. If we refuse to hear and see the truth, we have sealed our own dusty fate, as the chaff resigned to blow away in the wind. From dust we came. To dust we return. We all return to dust. But we get to decide what kind of dust it is we end up. Sawdust or Stardust.
If we stop, brush off the dust pile we’ve been hiding under, re-turn to God and repent of our willfulness and waywardness, Jesus will cleanse us, re-form us, re-clothe us in the robes of righteousness, and “re-dust” us with the grace of God’s redemption and love. Then we will all shine in living colors, the rainbow colors of a redeemed and resurrected life.
The dusting of death? Or the dusting of life?
Bite the dust? Or breathe the Spirit?
The choice is ours. To be dusted. Or to be “dusted.” That is the question.
And Jesus …He is always the answer.
*Wired.
Based on the Story Lectionary
Major Text
Mark Records Jesus’ Sending Out of His Disciples in Order to Call People to Repentance (Mark 6:6-13)
Matthew’s Account of Jesus’ Instructions to His Disciples on Going Before Him (Matthew 10)
Luke’s Account of the Sending of 12 and then 72 Disciples to Proclaim and Warn All the Towns of Israel (Luke 9 and 10)
Minor Text
The Curse of the Dust (Genesis 3)
Abraham Pleads with God and God’s Angels Warn Lot and His Family (Genesis 18-19)
Shimei Casts Dirt Upon David for His Deed (2 Samuel 16)
Elijah Confronts Ahab and Jezebel (1 Kings 18)
Psalm 30: The Lord Turns Wailing into Dancing
Psalm 44: Lord Raises Us from the Dust
Psalm 103: The Lord has Compassion and Remembers that We are Dust
Psalm 113: The Lord Raises the Needy from the Dust
Psalm 119: Follow the Lord for the Enduring Reward
God’s Warning to Samaria and Jerusalem (Micah 1)
The Crowd Tosses Dust at Paul’s Proclamation (Acts 22)
Image Exegesis: Dust
Eat the dust. Bite the dust. Gather dust. Dust is a major metaphor in our culture –and in scripture.
The word in Genesis for God’s creation of humanness if ‘aphar ha’adamah (dust of the soil or earth). We are not just earth, but the dust of the earth. We are made of the smallest possible particles of created tangible things.
The Jewish Encyclopedia identifies aphar as “a minute thing or bit” –and is used in scripture for both dust and ashes. Aphar (dust) in fact is one of the most prevalent metaphors in scripture.
Whereas humans were made from minute particles of being, the first woman, hava is related for the Jewish tradition to hayyim, life.
Jewish spiritual tradition links the kind of dust that humans are made of to a special connective kind of particle material that allows us to connect spiritually to God (note Jacob’s ladder).* Quantum physicists call this small particles light (the stuff of cosmic dust). For physicists as well as some Jewish thought, in order to be in touch with God relationally, we need to “ascend” to a place where we are in touch with God’s breath or “light” within us. For Christians that “Light” is Jesus, the alpha and omega, existing with God from the beginning of time (or creation as we know it).
We see our world as material, but as Malcolm Gladwell says, “To a worm in horseradish, the world is horseradish.” Both quantum physics and Jewish spiritual traditions would argue that God’s realm or kingdom is so much more than this. Jesus alludes to this as well.
It’s no wonder then that “dust” as a metaphor carries meanings of “anchorage,” “binding,” “limitation,” inability to see or hear beyond one’s own mind’s walls, a creature of mere “creation” as opposed to a spiritual stone in Jesus’ eternal kingdom.
Dust can refer in scripture to: Dust of humility / dust of death and human limitation / dust of disgrace or despair / dust of curse / dust inbreathed into new kind of creature that rises above the dust / resurrection / eternal life / Life itself / God’s gift and sovereignty.
All of these speak to the theme of resurrection and reliance on God/Jesus to lift us from mere “dust” into an abundant, beautiful, amazing, fulfilling and eternal Life. At creation, God’s breath allows us to have consciousness. At the time of our resurrection (as Jesus was resurrected, so can we be), we too will be lifted up into a new kind of body, a new life by God’s side and in God’s realm. For Jesus, to be able to “see” and “hear” means we can get a glimpse of that “kingdom” in the here and now.
Origen saw everything in this world as connected, dust to dust, and like Jacob’s ladder, everything on earth has a connection to something greater than itself. In other words, everything we see as material, is also metaphor.
Quantum physicists would say, we are living in a grand kind of “hologram.” How’s that for your Sunday morning breakfast!
But back to scripture. In addition to this theme of resurrection and lifting from dust (physically and spiritually), Jesus uses the idiom phrase too: “to shake off the dust.” For dust was also used in a negative way for those who were as God often said, “hard headed, stiff necked people.” Many believe that the idea of “shaking the dust off at someone” comes directly from the story of Lot and Sodom and Gomorrah, in which the “dust” was shaken off –and the towns literally were leveled back to “dust” or ash. Dust became a prophetic sign, a prophetic metaphor for the consequences of remaining closed-minded and closed-hearted. One can “block” God from one’s spirit. Spirit-blockers are to be shaken off like the mere “dust” they are, similar to the chaff blowing away from the wheat. Wheat have weight. Chaff have no real spiritual substance.
So to “shake off the dust” was to declare someone the “dust” they are –incapable of greater things and thoughts, feelings and insight. Hard headed, stiff necked people.
It is not even so much a “judgement” as a “consequence.”**
Herein also lies the idea of repentance as connected to dust or ash. It’s a sign of humility. And a sign that one is ready for change.*** But repentance is also a “re-turn” to God, and a rising from the dust of one’s past blindness, and stepping into new sight or insight.
Repentance therefore is frequently spoken about in conjunction with dust or ash. One recognizes one’s mistake, and seeks to “rise above it” by throwing ashes or dust from one’s head or ripping off one’s dirty clothing, and making a change of “direction.”
To be “dusted” therefore can have a double meaning. In our culture, it can mean to lose, be tired out, be killed, be blown away. But it can also mean to be “sprinkled.” Interestingly enough, in Old English/Old High German, the word for dust “tunst” in OE meant storm or breath, as well as to sprinkle, rise up, or kill.^
Some worshipers have claimed to experience a raining down of “gold dust” upon them as they praised God. They saw this as a sign of absolution, forgiveness, grace, a reminder of God’s true presence.
To be “dusted” then may be most of all a “warning.” What you do with that “dusting” is then up to you. Far from a judgment in which you are cursed and given up on, perhaps to be “dusted” in the prophetic sense meant to be marked in need of repentance.
When one has the dust thrown upon them (note Shimei who throws stones and dirt at David and who accepts that dust in humility recognizing his deeds), one is faced with a choice. One can turn (repent) and seek the heavenly “sprinkling” or baptism of the Holy Spirit. Or one can remain confined “to the dust.”
*chaimbentorrah.com
**See also Acts 13:51 and 18:6 as Paul shakes off dust. The word is also used in the Exodus, as the Lord “shook off” (eketinaksen) the Egyptians in the middle of the sea. In prophets, such as Nehemiah 5:12-13 and 2 Esdras 13:13 it is a sign of judgment.
***Some see shaking off the dust as a moment of decisive change in the vein of eschatology. See article in nbseminary.com. The seriousness of the Messiah’s message is about to come to pass.
^Online Etymological Dictionary