Luke 12:35-48 · Watchfulness
On Staying Awake
Luke 12:35-48
Sermon
by Wallace H. Kirby
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"Blessed are those servants whom the master finds awake when he comes ..." Perhaps this sermon need not be preached. The necessity of wakefulness may already be widely recognized as we gather for worship. We arrive tired, we endure preaching that is often supernaturally dull, and the atmosphere of quietness soon dispatches even the most faithful. This is not a modern problem. Our Puritan ancestors gave a high importance to staying awake. During their long services the ushers roamed the congregation with a long pole in hand. Male nodders got a whack from the metal knob on one end of the pole, and drowsing women were teased awake by the feather on the other end of the pole.

But there is more to such a sermon than the need to stay awake in worship. The real problem is that we tend to give way to sleepiness and miss our big moment of truth - in or out of church. I keep thinking about Thomas Bell. He went to sleep just before his big moment. In 1858 he was president of a scholarly organization called The Linnean Society. As he was writing his annual report, he said that there had been "... no striking discovery" announced to the group in that year. Oh yeah...? Among those who had delivered papers to this society during the year were Alfred Russell Wallace and Charles Darwin! Both of them outlined their revolutionary theories on biological evolution. The intellectual history of mankind took a gigantic leap on the truths of Wallace and Darwin, but Thomas Bell missed it all. He was intellectually asleep and thought that nothing vital had happened in that cozy little group. How we miss the big moment! How we fall asleep just before the great revealing. How we need to stay awake.

I

It is perilously easy to fall asleep and miss the prize. Jesus’ parable makes this quite clear. The master had gone off to the wedding and feast. There he would indulge in the celebration - the music, the wine, the dancing - and quite likely would come home in a generous mood. Possibly he would call all the servants together and say that he was going to take their place. They were to sit down at the table; he was going to serve the meal to them. If they were awake, this blessing would be theirs. But if he came in and found them all asleep, he would go up to his chambers and forget all about it.

Falling asleep and missing the big moment is a problem. One of the reasons we have this failing may be the numbing quality of routine. Routine can deaden us against perceiving the big moments. Wise are those who fight against the spiritual anaesthesia of the daily round.

A woman called a packing house and ordered the complete carcass of a horse. She met the delivery men and asked them to put the horse in the bathtub. As they left, the men could not resist asking the woman about this curious project. She told them that she and her husband had been married for over thirty years. Things were going well, but the routine was taking its toll. So she had decided to break out of this trap and ordered the horse. "Each evening," she said, "my husband comes in, goes into the bathroom, to wash up, and calls out to me, ‘Well, dear, what’s new today?’ " Blessed are those who decide that routine and monotony will not blind them to their big moment.

Routine doesn’t have to numb us toward the big moment of truth. One of the musicians who played many years for Toscanini said that the maestro had the ability to make the orchestra feel it was playing a well-known work for the first time. Each repeated playing of the score was done as if it were the premiere performance. After once recording the Beethoven Ninth Symphony, Toscanini said he had been conducting the Beethoven Ninth for over fifty years. He continued, "Now I think I finally understand it." Routine can yield its blessings if we stay awake.

Arrogance can also induce snoring before the big moment. Let me report on two near-misses. The first of them is the New Testament story of the call of Nathanael. Phillip told him that they had found the promised Christ. But Nathanael knew that such information was highly questionable: "Can anything good come out of Nazareth?" Nathanael was more than halfway asleep. He was certain that when the Christ came, he would not be from an obscure village like Nazareth. To Nathanael’s credit, he quickly awakened and yielded to the invitation: "Come and see." But he almost missed

it.

Similarly, I knew that the movie "E.T." would be a bore and that there would be nothing in it for me. Science fiction has never been an interest of mine. Tolkien’s little creatures bored me. I just knew that a movie about an ugly little creature from outer space could not hold my attention. The first few minutes of the movie confirmed my reservations. But then, after somehow staying awake, I began to succumb to the charms of that movie. It spoke a different message than is usually wrapped around such matters. Beyond a telling portrayal of the openness of children to new truth, it also hinted that the unknown is potentially friendly, and gentle, and caring. Had I walked out I would have missed a powerful, but subtle, theological affirmation of the goodness of creation - extending even to the unknown reaches of outer space.

Arrogance is often the enemy. All organizations need to have a continual infusion of new people, especially young people. The reason for this is that new people have not built up a paralyzing load of arrogance. New people do not "know" that certain things are impossible. Unburdened by this lack of limiting certainty, they often accomplish the impossible. Thoreau once called for the creation of a "Society for the Diffusion of Ignorance." All of us could use the "ignorance" that undercuts our assumptions that we have seen it all. Otherwise, we miss the big moment.

II

All this drives toward our basic need to stay awake to God in our lives. When he was dying, his nurse asked Rudyard Kipling if he needed anything. He said, "I need God," and so spoke for all of us. God is what all of us are really searching for. This is the quest that provokes all searches and all dissatisfactions. We don’t even have to know that this inner uneasiness, this sense that all of life’s achievements and successes have a hollow quality about them, is a search for God. But it’s there for believer and unbeliever alike. The Biblical testimony has words for it:

As a hart longs
for flowing streams,
so longs my soul
for thee, O God.
My soul thirsts for God,
for the living God.

And these words of Augustine are as penetrating as are those of the Psalmist:

... For thou hast made us for thyself and our hearts are restless till they rest in thee.

This quest for God is our real agenda, our real thirst, our real hunger and what we’re really looking for.

Even though we try, nothing else satisfies this need. Donald Miller, in The Case for Liberal Christianity, tells about his return to the life and faith of the church. Academic training and teaching had not filled the need. It began to occur to him that the church deals in what he lacked and wanted: a "Transcendent fix on the meaning and purpose for existence." This is another way to talk about God. Admitted or not, we do have deep hungers that go beyond the common concerns of our lives and world. We want to know if the universe is friendly, if we were meant to be, where we fit in, and if there is any guarantee that what we hold dear will endure.

We’ll miss God’s gracious response to such searchings if we fall asleep. Jesus was continually vexed with persons who gave in to slumbers at precisely those moments when they might have found God speaking to their most important needs. He told Martha that her household distractions were like going to sleep, missing her moment. He also raged at the religious people who believed they had God’s gracious truth totally confined to a written code. He "took the Fifth Amendment" before Herod, because he knew the old monarch had long ago fallen asleep to matters of the spirit.

Our churches have fallen asleep to the God-search, too. A young pastor once wrote his Bishop, inviting him to conduct a Quiet Hour in his church. Apparently the Bishop knew that congregation and said that he would not do it. "What your church needs," he wrote, "is not a Quiet Hour, but an earthquake." Let us beware that the church is not contributory to persons falling asleep before their big moment with God.

III

The question now becomes: what does wakefulness look like? What are the signs of staying awake? What qualities of alertness should we inventory? One very obvious sign of wakefulness is the impulse to hang around the church. This is a playing of the spiritual odds - that there is a high incidence of God confronting us in the life and work of the church. Of course, the church is sometimes the worst place to find God. "... It seems," says Paul, "that your church meetings do you more harm than good!" (1 Corinthians 11:11b, Phillip’s translation) Most of us have our own chapter and verse on this. The church has never ceased devising ways to anaesthesize us against God.

On the whole, the record of the church is good. We would do well to take the church seriously if we are trying to stay awake before God. Luke says that Jesus went up to the synagogue, "as was his custom." Quite likely Jesus knew all the failings of the synagogue. He knew how it could be a barrier rather than a pathway to God. Yet he continued to attend the house of worship faithfully. Perhaps he knew the odds were in favor of this being a meeting place with God. Staying awake will mean staying with the church.

Staying awake will also mean not ruling anything out. All moments, persons, or circumstances are potential meetings with God that can fill the hunger of our heart. But it does take some doing. Emily Dickinson said it in these lines,

Earth's crammed with heaven,
And every common bush afire with God.

We must remember that God has the secular franchise, too. He is operative in the common, ordinary and profane "outside-the-temple" world. We’ll see him working there if we are awake. We must stay awake to God in our joys and sufferings. We need to be awake to his presence in our search for truth, our inescapable sense of "ought," and in the mysterious depths of beauty. There is blessing to us, if by God’s grace, we can manage this.

A final sign of staying awake before God is the fellowship of one another. Sartre missed it all when he said "hell is others." We have similar moments and we can partially sympathize with Sartre’s definition. Yet the interpersonal relationship is also the source of God’s gracing of our lives. It took me over twenty-five years to complete Martin Buber’s I and Thou. My son, filled with enthusiasm in his theological studies, gave me a second copy and I read what I ought to have read before. Buber is a profound answer to Sartre, and to us in our worst moments. "In the beginning," he writes, "is the relation." Real life - God - is at the intersection of meeting with others. A Christian might be excused from suggesting that Buber’s rich insights are commentary on a well-known New Testament scripture: "And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us ..." Staying awake to the presence of God is to pay attention to what is at the heart of person-to-person experience. In the Christfigure, the entire New Testament may be described as playing out that truth.

CSS Publishing Company, If Only..., by Wallace H. Kirby