Luke 13:1-9 · Repent or Perish
One More Year
Luke 13:1-9
Sermon
by Schuyler Rhodes
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Have you ever been judged and found wanting? No? Well, I have. I remember about a thousand years ago when I first went off to college. It was a heady time. I had grown up in a fairly controlled environment and the sudden surge of freedom caused me to, well, go a little crazy. I will be honest with you. I did more partying than I did studying. The result of this was that I was soon on academic probation. Moreover, I got called into the academic dean’s office for what was called a “conversation.” I showed up at the appointed hour and was made to wait for another forty minutes just to be certain we knew who was in charge here. Then I was ushered into the dean’s office. She was busy reading my file with a terse look on her face that was perfectly accented by reading glasses that sat just a little too far down on her nose. She arched her eyebrows and looked up at me. “Well, we have been enjoying our first semester at school, haven’t we?” The use of the word “we” was confusing. I had not seen her at any of the parties I had attended unless she was carefully disguised. I stuffed my resentment down and mumbled, “Yes Ma’am.”

I don’t think she liked being called “Ma’am. She did her own stuffing down of resentment and continued. “You know this cannot continue, don’t you Mr. Rhodes?” Yes, that had occurred to me. “You are occupying a space in this institution, which means someone else did not get accepted. Why should we allow you to take up space without you performing in ways that we know you can?” I said nothing, but my flushed, embarrassed face spoke volumes. She sighed and said, “Well, it took you some weeks to get into this spot. I suppose we can give you the same amount of time to get out of it. But understand this. You could find yourself expelled if you do not improve.”

I think you could say that she lit a fire under me. I did not wish to be expelled for a host of reasons, not the least of which would be explaining this to my mother and father. So, I did a lot less partying and a lot more studying, and by the end of the semester I had pulled my grades up to a respectable level. I went on to graduate with a passable “B” average.

This parable we just heard has a measured kind of rhythm to it. It is not unlike the academic dean at my school. She had the capacity to mix grace with accountability. The man had been waiting three years to get some fruit from his fig tree and was understandably a bit frustrated. He instructed that gardener to cut it down because it was wasting soil. The gardener, though, called for grace, asking for one more year and a bit of fertilizer. Like most parables, there are few if any answers given. We don’t know, for example, if the land owner allowed for another year. And if he did allow for it, we don’t know if the tree produced any fruit. What is presented here is not a story with solutions but a tale with possibilities.

Are there places in your life where you, like the fig tree, are not producing fruit? My guess is that most of us could answer this in the affirmative. In the landscape of our lives there are many places where it’s important to be fruitful. From parenting to work to school and back again, we are called to be fruitful. And if we are continuously unable to produce fruit, there are often consequences, aren’t there? In my case, I could have easily found myself on the bus back home. In the case of the fig tree the consequences could range from being immediately cut down to having a year to get it together. I think of all the areas of our lives where fruitfulness is important. You can think of these things as well, I know. But for now, let’s focus on what this means for our faith community.

What does it mean for a faith community to bear fruit? And then, sisters and brothers, what does it mean for us if we are not bearing fruit?

Let’s take the first question first. One obvious answer to that is that we should be growing. We should not be growing, sisters and brothers, just so we can increase numbers and revenue. No. We should be growing because the kind of community we offer here is not offered elsewhere. If we are fruitful, our Christian community is loving, gracious, affirming, and transformative. If we are fruitful, we are the kind of community that offers God’s incredible love and grace to everyone. We should be adding souls to the life of the community because people out there truly need the healing love of Christ. On top of that, friends, the world needs you. It’s true. And we cannot dodge the fact that a significant part of our work as a Christian community is to invite and welcome people into discipleship and relationship, both with God and all of us! So let me ask the question. How are we doing on that score? Do we need to dig around the roots a bit? Add some fertilizer? I love the possibility and the potential that can come when we blend accountability with grace.        

Another key factor of Christian community is the quality of our relationships with one another. Our call is to be loving and forgiving, to be mutually supportive and to create safe space for everyone. In this “sanctuary” people should be safe in their spirit so that they can explore their faith in God. They should also feel safe in their hearts. That is, free from gossip and negative talk. In Christian community if we talk about someone else, it is only to lift that person up to God’s glory. No one should ever feel the sting of parking lot gossip or innuendo. And finally, people should be physically and emotionally safe. That means our facilities should be in good condition, and it means that we should have good, healthy boundaries around sexual and other concerns. The same question arises. How are we doing on that score?

Sisters and brothers, another unavoidable piece of being fruitful in Christ is our willingness to stand with the poor and the oppressed, and to work for peace in our world. I know. Some of you are sitting there thinking that the pastor is getting all political again. Friends, let us make a clear distinction between the gospel call to serve the poor and to be peacemakers, and partisan political positions. Living out the gospel will always have political implications, it’s true. But that is a substantially different thing than staking out an ideological position in church. Remember this. In this church community there is no right wing or left wings, the only sound you will hear in this congregation is the sound of angel’s wings. We do our level best in this church to follow the way of Jesus. I think not of political sides but of the voice of scripture saying, “if you did not do it to the least of these, you did not do it to me.” (Matthew 25:45-46) So, with that said, the same question comes. How are we doing on this one?

We’ve taken a moment to think about what fruitfulness looks like. Now we should think together about what happens if we fail to be fruitful? What if the gardener talked the landowner into giving him a year to work with the fig tree and we simply don’t bear fruit? What happens if we do not bear the fruit of discipleship and the building up of community? What happens if we are mean and spiteful to one another and to others who come to us? And what happens if we do not feed the hungry, heal the sick, and follow the way of Jesus? What are the consequences of not bearing fruit?

John Wesley, who founded the movement that became the Methodist Church, said that he wasn’t so much afraid of the people called Methodist ceasing to exist. His real fear was that they would become a hollow shell bearing the form but none of the substance of Christian community. His real fear was that they would become dead in the faith. This could be one consequence of not bearing fruit.

Another consequence comes from the fact that people watch us. They know who we are and what we say we believe. And if our words and our lives do not cohere, then the world out there ceases to take us seriously and we become a kind of joke that is too stale to even tell anymore. If we are not fruitful, we become irrelevant.

The good news, though, is that we are called to live into the tension between accountability and grace. We are called to honesty and truthfulness about where we are doing well and where we could use improvement. And friends, we are called above all else to be faithful in following the path of Jesus.

I believe that we should add these questions to our ongoing Lenten reflection and self-examination. Are we bearing fruit as Christian community? Are we creating disciples of Jesus? Are we students of the master? Are we creating a community that is a safe space for all people? Are we living out the teachings of the master? Are we serving the poor? Are we being witnesses for peace? What do you think? In some areas, we’re doing well. In others we could use a little help.

As we pray and consider all this, I am wondering what it looks like for us to dig around the roots a little? How can we freshen and fertilize the soil of this Christian community so that we might better bear fruit? How is it that we can find this balance of accountability and grace within our community and with one another?

My earnest hope and my personal commitment is that we will partner together as we work to bear the fruit of faithfulness. My ongoing prayer and deepest desire is that we will give ourselves the Lenten gift of accountability and grace as we speak truth and create space for growth and change.

Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Shout Joy to the Storm: Cycle C sermons for Lent and Easter based on the Gospel texts, by Schuyler Rhodes