Luke 6:12-16 · The Twelve Apostles
Moving On
Luke 6:12-16, Luke 9:1-9, Luke 10:1-24
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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Prop: dusty bowl

This bowl hasn’t been used in a long time. You can tell, because it’s covered in dust. It hasn’t been touched, cleaned, moved, because it’s been here in this church on this shelf a very long time. [You could also refer to something in a glass case or anything that has sat around for a while.] It’s not being used in ministry or worship. It isn’t something that is used in healing people or baptizing them. It’s here on the shelf, gathering dust.

This is perhaps one of the best metaphors we have right now for the church in America. The question is –does it describe yours?

Why is it so hard for us in the church to move on? To move from our habits, and our “memories,” our nostalgia of days gone by, or some “golden age,” and be about serving real people in a real world in “real time”?

Why is it so hard in our lives and in our churches –to move on?

Moving on is easier said than done. Most of us have a hard time breaking from the “familiar” and moving on to the unfamiliar. It’s why so many of us stay in difficult jobs, why some stay in abusive marriages, why others stay in situations that may prevent us from growing, why many churches don’t change their ideas or their ministries often for 30 or more years at a time.

Human beings are on the whole terribly afraid of change. We love the familiar. We worship the status quo, we feel good when things around us and in our lives “stay the same.”

Part of the reason we fear change so much is that it means we need to deal with unpleasant new circumstances with which we are unseasoned. We fear rejection. We fear failure. We fear losing what we already have. We fear above all –- risking the unknown.

But this is the exact opposite of what Jesus is trying to teach his disciples. Because faith is ALL about risk! In fact, “risk” may just be another word for “faith.”

One of oldest Christian metaphors is the boat. Jesus himself spent a good deal of time in boats. Not only did he choose to found his ministry center by the sea, the bustling harbors the central trade routes of the region, but he spent a lot of time in boats, either escaping the crowds, fishing with his disciples, speaking from them for amplification purposes, or simply getting from one place to another. Through storms and through calm, Jesus knew what it was like to sail the waters of the Sea of Galilee.

We rarely hear about Jesus sitting in the boat at dock. The stories we hear are about the disciples fishing, storms arising, Jesus speaking from the ocean, sailing across the sea. The metaphor of the boat is exactly that it is a vessel that sails the high seas. The worst place for a boat during a storm? --in the dock where it can bang roughly against the shore or smash into the harbor. The safest place for a boat in a storm is out at sea sailing and maneuvering the waves.

Such is the way of discipleship with Jesus. And the true meaning of faith. Christians are meant to be people who sail the seas, proclaiming Jesus Lord, going in search of places to baptize and to bless. Christians were not meant to take up residence in the safety of the docks. The church was not meant to hug harbors.

Perhaps the best picture of faith, of discipleship is that ship riding the crests of the waves, not sure where it’s going, but knowing it is safe in Jesus’ arms.

Jesus at this point in his ministry takes more and more time letting his disciples know that they must continue his ministry, that one day, he will no longer be with them. He knows what the Pharisees are thinking. He knows his life will soon be in danger. But yet he continues pushing the envelope. He doesn’t soften the blows to those who won’t commit. He doesn’t stop healing or “breaking the Sabbath” or citing the authority of God to forgive sins. Jesus pushes onward, courageously and bravely.

We often don’t think of how Jesus must have felt. Surely he was afraid. Surely he feared change and challenge as much as any of his disciples. And yet, he called them together one day after days and nights in prayer, and he made 12 of them apostles with the authority to cast out demons and heal diseases, to proclaim the coming kingdom and his messiahship to people everywhere. Later, he would send another 70, Luke tells us. And to all of them, he gave a strategy for failure –if you are not welcomed, shake off the dust from your feet, and move on!

In homes in Jesus’ time, hospitality demanded that a visitor have his feet washed, and his head anointed, be given food and lodging. If one wasn’t welcomed, his feet would remain dirty and dusty from traveling the road.

But Jesus says, don’t fret about it. Is there no one to give you respite? No one to wash your feet and welcome you? So just kick off the dust a bit, and travel on. Someone will –elsewhere!

What a fear of the unknown that must have been for those first disciples! They had no idea where they would land, how they would be received, what would happen to them. And Jesus told them to take nothing with them, but just to rely on the “hospitality of strangers.” Most of all, to rely on the provision and grace of God!

Jesus has blessed them with his authority and power –of what could they then fear? A lot!

Jesus never tells us that nothing bad will happen to us in the world. In fact, if you go out in Jesus’ name, chances are, a lot of people will not like you, will not welcome you, will oppose you! In the Middle East right now, you can get beheaded just for declaring that you are a follower of Jesus! And in Jesus’ time, with the Pharisees opposing him, he warned them that they would also be opposed! You will not only have people not wash your feet. You’ll have people slam the door in your face.

No, they had a LOT to fear! And yet –Jesus tells them: No Fear. Something greater awaits you!

We can learn a lot about “moving forward,” “moving on” from Jesus himself. Jesus moved on all the way to the cross, and fulfilled God’s mission even to death! How did he do it?

What does Jesus do to soften the fear of what is to come? 1) he is day and night in prayer; 2) he accustoms himself and his disciples to a “rocking” boat and teaches them how to “rock” the boat themselves; 3) he knows what it means to “kick off the dust” when he is not welcome; 4) his authority, his power, his strength, and his vision come from God, in other words, he knows who he is, and his disciples know “whose” they are; 5) he knows what the mission is and never forgets it; 6) he is always looking forward, not back; and 7) he takes time to rejoice in the victories.

Breaking it down --Jesus knows when to keep moving, and he knows when to stay still, when to pause, to pray, and to rejoice!

Do you?

We know from the scriptures that Jesus never did anything without first descending into nights and ascending into days of prayer. Luke tells us he did this before he chose his apostles that day. Jesus had many followers, many disciples. He chose 12 of them to be his closest apostles. Later, he would choose 70 more. And yet still, in the end, few of them were brave enough to stay with him at the cross, to declare they were his disciples in the midst of persecution. The bravest of his followers was not even one of the 12, but a Pharisee named Joseph of Arimathea, who would dare to request Jesus’ body, and place it in his own gravesite.

Even at the moment of the cross, when his closest apostles were in hiding, in fear, when several had betrayed him in one way or another, Jesus sang a victory song, completed his mission, and looked to the day of resurrection! (Psalm 22)

Jesus never forgot who he was, never forgot his mission, never ceased to attribute his power and authority to the One and Only God. Jesus’ only pauses in his ministry were in prayer, in dining with his disciples, in teaching them and sending them, in rejoicing in their victories. The rest of the time, Jesus was “on the move.” Whether “rocking the boat” in one town or another, healing, teaching, confronting, challenging, forgiving, or traveling, Jesus knew how to “shake off the dust” and how to look ahead to the time to come.

“Move on down, move on down the road,” sing the characters from The Wiz. It’s time in our churches that we get up from our harbors where we cower from our world in fear, and begin proclaiming Jesus in every time and clime to the ones, the nones and the dones -–rejoicing in those who come to Christ (the ones), and not getting discouraged by those who don’t (the nones and the dones).

Being the Church of Jesus Christ is not about “success,” but about something greater –about the kind of faith that prevails and moves forward even in the face of failure, fear, and doubt -–a church built on nothing less than “Jesus blood and righteousness.”

The sea squirt swims happily for the first phase of its life, and then finds a rock or peace of coral it likes, attaches itself to that rock. Once it attaches itself to a rock, and “finds” the place where it wants to live and feels most at home, it freezes its moment, digests its brain, and becomes a plant. The brain is for movement and memory. There is no need for a stationary sea squirt to have to deal with the past or the future. So it eats and digests its brain, and becomes a plant. Dementia is the result of refusing to move on and face the unpredictable . . . .

There are too many plants out there masquerading as churches. Let’s not be one of them.

Let’s get out those dusty bowls, clean them up, and start using them to baptize and to minister to this world, so that we can wash the feet of the forgotten, the forlorn, those fading from sight in need of our compassion and ministry.

Can you say the words in answer to Jesus when he asks, “Who will go for me?”

Say it together with me:

“Here I am, Lord. Send me!”


Based on the Story Lectionary

Major Text

Luke’s Witness to Jesus’ Choosing of Apostles (6:12-6:16 and 9:1-9:6 and 10:1-10:24)

Minor Text

The Call of Moses (Exodus 4)

Psalm 1: The Chaff of Sin

Psalm 35: Chaff Before the Wind

Psalm 91: God’s Protection

Psalm 140: God’s Protection

Psalm 121: God’s Protection

The Call of Jeremiah (Jeremiah 1)

Isaiah’s Dream (6)

Isaiah’s Warning to the False Prophets in Jerusalem (28)

Zephaniah’s Warning (2)

Matthew’s Witness to Jesus’ Choosing of Apostles (9:35-11:1 and 11:2-12:8)

Mark’s Witness to Jesus’ Choosing of Apostles (3:13-3:19)

Acts Naming of Jesus’ Inner Circle with the Addition of A New Apostle (1:12-26)

Paul’s Letter to the Ephesian Church about being One in Jesus (2)

Luke’s Witness to Jesus’ Choosing of Apostles

Now during those days [as the Pharisees began to confront Jesus and plot against him], he went out to the mountain to pray; and he spent the night in prayer to God.

And when day came, he called his disciples and chose twelve of them, whom he also named apostles: Simon, whom he named Peter, and his brother Andrew, and James, and John, and Philip, and Bartholomew, and Matthew, and Thomas, and James son of Alphaeus, and Simon, who was called the Zealot, and Judas son of James, and Judas Iscariot, who became a traitor.

Then Jesus called the twelve together and gave them power and authority over all demons and to cure diseases, and he sent them out to proclaim the kingdom of God and to heal.

He said to them, “Take nothing for your journey, no staff, nor bag, nor bread, nor money –not even an extra tunic. Whatever house you enter, stay there, and leave from there. Wherever they do not welcome you, as you are leaving that town, shake the dust off from your feet as a testimony against them.”

They departed and went through the villages, bringing the good news and curing diseases everywhere.

[Jesus sends apostles before him to various towns. He meets up with them frequently. The Samaritans reject him, jealous that he is headed for Jerusalem. Along the way, some others ask to follow him.]

After this the Lord appointed seventy others and sent them on ahead of him in pairs to every town and place where he himself intended to go.

He said to them, “The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few; therefore ask the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest.

Go on your way. See, I am sending you like lambs into the midst of wolves. Carry no purse, no bag, no sandals; and greet no one on the road. Whatever house you enter, first say, ‘Peace to this house!’ And if anyone is there who shares in peace, your peace will rest on that person; but if not, it will return to you.

Remain in the same house, eating and drinking whatever they provide, for the laborer deserves to be paid. Do not move about from house to house.

Whenever you enter a town and its people welcome you, eat what is set before you; cure the sick who are there, and say to them, ‘The kingdom of God has come near to you.’

But whenever you enter a town and they do not welcome you, go out into its streets and say, ‘Even the dust of your town that clings to our feet, we wipe off in protest against you. Yet know this: the kingdom of God has come near. I tell you, on that day it will be more tolerable for Sodom than for that town.

“Woe to you, Chorazin!   Woe to you, Bethsaida! For if the deeds of power done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago, sitting in sackcloth and ashes. But at the judgment it will be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon than for you. And you Capernaum, will you be exalted to heaven? No, you will be brought down to Hades.

Whoever listens to you listens to me, and whoever rejects you rejects me, and whoever rejects me rejects the one who sent me.”

The seventy returned with joy, saying, “Lord, in your name even the demons submit to us!”

He said to them, “I watch Satan fall from heaven like a flash of lightning. See, I have given you authority to tread on snakes and scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy; and nothing will hurt you.

Nevertheless, do not rejoice at this, that the spirits submit to you, but rejoice that your names are written in heaven.”

At that time, Jesus rejoiced in the Holy Spirit and said, “I thank you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and the intelligent [serpents] and have revealed them to infants; yes, Father, for such was your gracious will.”

“All things have been handed over to me by my Father; and no one knows who the Son is except the Father, or who the Father is except the Son and anyone to whom the Son chooses to reveal him.”

Then turning to the disciples, Jesus said to them privately, “Blessed are the eyes that see what you see! For I tell you that many prophets and kings desired to see what you see, but did not see it, and to hear what you hear, but did not hear it.”

Image Exegesis: Kicking Off the Dust

“If you will not obey the Lord Your God, ….The Lord will change the rain of your land into powder, and only dust shall come down upon you from the sky until you are destroyed.” (Deut 28:15/24)

The word apostle in Greek is apostolos. It means “to send from.” In Jesus’ day, it was a maritime term which referred to a cargo ship or naval fleet sent out with power and authority. In the Hebrew testament, the word used was salah, meaning a sending or commissioning, an empowering, representation by proxy. The word in Hebrew for example was used by rabbis who were sent out to represent the authority of the Sanhedrin. The messenger or representative (saliah) bore the authority of the one who sent him.

In the case of Jesus (the messiah), the “apostles” he chose from his group of disciples would become his most trusted representatives, those who knew and understood his mission the best and had the loyalty and faith necessary to receive the power and authority of Jesus –and the Holy Spirit. They would be sent to towns ahead of Jesus, bearing the news of the coming kingdom and telling them that the Messiah would be coming there. They had the authority to expel demons and to heal, so that all would know, they were sent by the One who had the authority of God.

Some of the newly commissioned apostles, particularly from the latter 70 Jesus chose, would be fascinated by their sudden abilities. Jesus had to remind even them that the “ability” was God’s!

It’s interesting that the Greek word is affiliated with boats and ships. The ship is the oldest discipleship symbol in Christian history and symbolizes the “going out” of followers of Jesus into the world, taking risks for the gospel, and venturing into unknown territories in the Name of Christ.

As a metaphor, the word apostolos would symbolize the disciples’ “sailing on the wings of the Spirit.” They were commissioned by Jesus with spiritual authority, and a prophetic message. Like the prophets in the Hebrew testament, their words and their deeds were not their own, but God’s. In return for their “going,” they would receive God’s blessing and protection.

The calling of the apostles is found in Matthew, Mark, and John. All three mention the authority to cast out demons and proclaim the good news of the coming kingdom. Matthew and Luke include healing. While Matthew makes the connection of the “12” with the 12 tribes of Israel and their mission to find the lost sheep, Luke adds that Jesus made this decision after much prayer. We also know from Luke that Jesus chose the 12, and later the 70 from his many disciples. And still, he mentions that there are too little reapers for God’s vast harvest. Luke also notes the return of the 70 and Jesus’ rejoicing in those who have repented.

Both Matthew and Luke (Luke tells it twice) relay Jesus’ instructions to the disciples (both the 12 and 70) to take nothing with them, to rely on the hospitality of someone in every town, and in the event, they are not received and their message is disregarded, they are to “kick off the dust” from their feet, as a witness to the event, and to go on.

The metaphor of dust is a very important one in the scriptures. We are first formed from dust, and someday to dust we will return. Without the breath of God, we remain merely dust. Part of our egoism lies in thinking, we are our own and exist for ourselves and by ourselves.

More than that however, it is the curse of the serpent after the fall in the garden to waddle on his belly and eat the dust of the earth.

It is also Cain’s curse to “work” the ground, as his brother’s blood cries out from the earth itself in witness to his sin.

Psalm 22 references the “dust of death,” the dry, waterless stasis that represents humanity without the Holy Spirit. When the Holy Spirit withdraws from you, all that is left is “dust” and “death.”

In fact, in Deuteronomy (28), a dust storm is punishment for forsaking God. The dust of sin is the dust of the grave.

In Jewish tradition, to be in mourning meant to push on ashes and sackcloth, and often to sit in the dust.

But this is not the advise of Jesus to his apostles. They are not to fall into mourning for the ones who will not listen. But to kick off the dust from their feet, and to walk on to the next place.

This kicking off of the dust has many layers of meaning therefore.

  1. In the Hebrew scriptures, God promises that the descendents of Abraham will be more than the dust, stars, and sand. To have your “dust” of your town “kicked off” meant therefore that you have denied yourself the blessings of your lineage.
  2. The cleansing of one’s feet was part of the hospitality of a guest in Jesus’ day. When you entered a household, your feet would be washed, and perhaps your head anointed, and you would be served food, and given a place to sleep. To deny that hospitality was rude. It was expected by all. When Jesus’ apostles would come across a place that would not welcome them and wash the dust of the road from their feet, they weren’t to worry about it, but to just “kick off that dust” on their way out!
  3. Additionally, kicking off the dust was an affront. It was a habit often done when leaving a gentile (used loosely…for gentile could also mean a Jew who was not upright and “in” right relationship) place. It was a “cleansing” process. The cleansing in this case was similar to Pilate’s washing of hands. It is a clearing of responsibility from one in authority for what would happen next. Moving forward with a clear conscience was paramount. The disciples wouldn’t have time to lament over those who would not listen. But they needed to keep moving to get to those who would.
  4. Kicking off or up dust is also a symbol for the “kiss of death.” It was a judgement against those towns who would not repent and believe in the messiah.
  5. It was a curse, that like the serpent, the town would be left “in the dust.”
  6. The dust represents the “chaff” separated from the wheat. The kicking of the dust was a sign that this town was relegated to the chaff, which, similar to the storm in Deuteronomy, would be blown away by the wind (the judgment of the Holy Spirit).
  7. The action of kicking off the dust was a “sacrament of failure.” The mission of Jesus was not about success or failure. But about God’s call to all to come back into the fold. For Jesus, the sacrament of kicking off the dust proclaimed that the kingdom was coming, and it wouldn’t be good for them. So the disciples need not worry about failure. The failure was the town’s, not the disciples’.

The mission of Jesus, like the parable he would later tell about the mustard seed, would be widespread and fast-moving. There was no time to tarry about those who would not receive the word of God! The mission was to get to as many of the “lost sheep” as possible before Jesus’ time would come to an end.

The disciples Jesus chose first, the 12, would play the largest part in the gospel stories from that time until the birth of the early church:

Simon Peter (the rock), one of Jesus’ first disciples and a fisherman, and Jesus’ cousin

Simon’s brother Andrew, also a fisherman, and Jesus’ cousin

James the son of Zebedee, a fisherman

John the son of Zebedee, James’ brother. Jesus called the two brothers “the sons of Thunder”

Philip

Bartholomew

Thomas

Matthew (Levi the tax collector)

James the son of Alphaeus

Thaddeus, also known as Lebbaeus, and also most likely known as Judas son of James, to distinguish him from the other Judas          

Simon the Cananaean, a Zealot

Judas Iscariot (son of Simon the Leper)

Those chosen for Jesus’ mission would later appoint others as well. And the idea of “sending out” or apostolos would become the roots of Christian “evangelism,” the proclamation of the “good news” –that Jesus is alive, the kingdom is coming, it’s time to repent and turn to the Lord!

The message today perhaps? Dust off your Bible, dust off your zeal and your faith. And get ready. Because Jesus is calling you to go! Proclaim his Name! Call for repentance! Heal! Go!

As Isaiah so adeptly replied to the Lord’s question, “Who will go for me?”

Your answer: “Here I am, Lord. Send me!”

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., by Lori Wagner