Luke 12:49-53 · Not Peace but Division
Spirit Signs
Luke 12:49-56
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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Explosive! This is the way Jesus described the time in which he was living. He was feeling distressed, anxious. He knows that his mission will cause great upheaval due to the issues of the times. And yet he knew he had no choice but to carry it out.

The head-in-the-sand “amnesia” of Jesus’ contemporaries may seem odd to us now, but when one is in the midst of divisive upheaval, paradigmatic change, cultural shift, even within an atmosphere of oppression and revolution, that person often will, either consciously or unconsciously, not see it for what it is. When it comes to what’s going on around us, we tend to practice “selective comprehension.”

Critique is easy in retrospect. History is written after the fact. The present is not always easy to discern for us or to face head on.

It’s human nature to cling to the past, to the familiar, to the status quo, no matter how difficult it may feel or how much we know change is necessary. The “way it is” always feels preferable to “the unknown way” it might be.

Jesus knew the travails of his current culture, the divisions that already existed. But he also knew that in delivering his message, God’s message, those divisions would only increase. The temperature would rise, and the volcano would smoke! For not everyone would want to listen to what he had to say. Like all prophets throughout history, he would be jeered and persecuted for saying what those around him did not want to hear.

For some, his message would be a stumbling stone (as he said prior). For others it would be a welcome salve. But deliver it he would. The world was going to change. And barely anyone seemed to notice the signs of all that was coming.

This must have vexed Jesus to the core. It certainly brought him great anguish.

As he delivered parable after parable, taught lesson after lesson, he begged those around him to notice what was happening right beneath their noses, to pay attention to the issues he needed them to see. And yet, they couldn’t or wouldn’t.

They couldn’t see the problems. And they certainly couldn’t see God’s coming intervention that would serve to tear them literally apart.

Today, we live in a charged cultural atmosphere not that unlike the one Jesus was describing in first century Israel.

Not just our country, but our world is divided, and those divisions are continuing to tear through any hope for unity we may have had in the last 50 years. Not only do we not feel unified, but we stand divided on nearly every imaginable issue, even in our own backyards and churches.

Political divisions

Economic divisions

Identity divisions

Religious divisions

Cultural divisions

Morality divisions

We even stand divided in our interpretations of scripture itself.

And yet most of us go about our days trying not to think about what those divisions mean for us as a people, what may happen if they grow any wider, and what the implications are for nation and world.

Although it’s difficult not to see any of this day to day, do we really see the signs of what this means for our physical, emotional, and spiritual future?

Into this cultural muddle comes Jesus in the form of the Holy Spirit. And yet, our minds are so closed to what’s going on around us, we can’t possibly see what the Spirit is doing in the midst of it all.

Those who believe that God is “on their side” tend to believe without a doubt that their interpretation of whatever issue they are grandstanding it absolutely correct and without fault or error.

Those on the “opposite side” feel exactly the same way.

Both are missing the signs of the Spirit.

The truth is….whenever we are convinced that our own opinion is correct, that’s when we undoubtedly miss what God is trying to tell us or what God is attempting to do in our midst.

It’s far too easy to lean to the side of human preference than it is to open one’s mind to the potential and possibilities that God might suggest.

But as the Hebrew testament so often noted, we are a “hard-necked” people. Stubborn and belligerent.  We want to believe what we want to believe, and don’t you challenge us on it! We wave our flags of contention toward anyone who tries, including Jesus.

I imagine that Jesus is just as frustrated with us today in our world and in our churches as he was in his own time as a human being on earth. And yet, he will continue to carry out God’s mission. He will continue to try to guide us, teach us, warn us, and throw fiery balls of contention and doubt within our well-laid out and most convincing arguments.

If anyone can blow up a stalemate into an ultimately chaotic mess, it’s Jesus. Just look at what happened at Babel!

In order for God to get God’s message through, God first needed to divide and separate the strongholds!

Sometimes in our faith we believe that the best way to carry on in life is to be absolutely sure of everything we know about Jesus, what God wants, and what the Holy Spirit “should” back us up on.

But the truth is, Jesus came to shake up everything we thought we knew and to challenge us to the very bones on what we thought we could be absolutely sure of.

He messed with people’s heads and confused their very orderly lives completely. He pointed out loopholes in their arguments, and he threw wrenches into their well-oiled religious machinery. For until we can be “unlocked” from the things we are “sure of,” we can never truly pay attention and understand the signs of God in our midst and the mission that God truly wants us to embark on in our world.

We need to open our minds to the signs of the Spirit, to the places in our lives in which God comes to “mess us up” and “challenge our beliefs.” We need to re-evaluate our discipleship and the way we look at others. We need to look hard and close at what’s going on around us and ask where God means us to be within it. And we need to listen with our hearts, our intuition, our spirits, and our minds together, so that what we hear is not our own agendas and desires, but God’s voice pointing us into new directions and awkwardly unusual circumstances.

How can we recognize God’s voice from our own?

God’s mission is always about love. God’s voice is always about mercy. God’s signs are always pointing to the life and lessons of Jesus.

If ever in doubt –default on the side of love, inclusiveness, acceptance, caring, and patience. If those characteristics are present, there’s a good chance God is in it.

ChristianGlobe Network, Inc., by Lori Wagner