Mark 6:1-6 · A Prophet Without Honor
The Power of the Staff
Mark 6:1-13
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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A year or so ago, when our primary activity during lockdown was to sit on the porch and watch the wildlife, I noticed a mother bird building a nest. I had never seen the process up close like this, and so fascinated, I took note of everything she was doing. In fact, I became so engrossed in Mama bird’s family that I would perch on my rocking chair each and every day, just so I could observe the entire scenario up close and personal.

She gathered bits of grass, twigs, leaves, and other odds and ends and wove them into a nest, tucked into an opening in the side of the house, where a little alcove provided both shelter and protection from predators. Soon, the nest was entirely hidden. But still she flew back and forth, back and forth, from yard to brick until finally, I didn’t see her for a while.

But one day, as I was eating my breakfast on the porch, lo and behold, I heard chirping. I peered around to try to see inside the alcove. I couldn’t see the nest itself, but I could see about 5 or 6 open mouths stretching outward from tiny little necks, reaching for the bits of food Mama bird would bring into the nest.  Again, she was on a mission. Off she flew to find food.  Within a moment, she was back depositing the food inside the open, eager beaks. I had never seen a bird’s beak open that wide! It appeared as though they were merely attached at the base, stretching so widely open that their mouths appeared far bigger than their bodies. They were in fact tiny bare bodies with giant open beaks!

But this didn’t last forever. One day, it became time for the birds to fly the nest. This was fascinating because it appeared at first that they didn’t want to do it. Would you? Here they were in birdie heaven getting fed each day in that warm, cozy nest. It looked scary out there. They were still young and little. It was a dangerous world, unfamiliar, and full of predators. They were inexperienced.  They had no idea how to gather food for themselves, dig for a worm, and most importantly, they didn’t know how to fly! And it was a long way down. They had never used their wings. They had formed, but they were still small and barely developed. The sky out there looked wide and vast. Yet they couldn’t stay where they were. The space was growing tight. If they wanted to live, grow, and flourish, they would need to leave their nest.

One by one, they moved to the edge, fluttered their wings wildly and suddenly took off. Except the last bird. He moved to the edge. Then moved back again. He moved to the edge, looked around. Then nervously backed away. He appeared to look down, to the sides, up into the air, and then decided, taking that risk was a bad idea. On this went for about a day. Then Mama came back. And you can guess what happened. She pushed that baby right out of that nest. He may have been panicking. I’d guess he was. His wings fluttered sporadically and frantically, but as he flapped for his life, to his surprise, up he flew, and landed on the branch of the nearest tree, where he seemed to sit stunned for a brief moment. Then discovering he could fly, off he went, stopping briefly at each telephone pole, until at last, away he went.

If only humans were that simple. Or that brave, right?

We humans are complicated. Of course, we don’t really know what went on inside the brain of that little bird. But we do know what goes on inside of ours when we are faced with doing something we’ve never done before or daring a risk we are not prepared to take.

Some of us may be daring sorts, who simply go off and do that thing!

But if you are like the most of us, it’s not that easy. And in fact, the older we get, the harder it gets. This is where our children and grandchildren can teach us a thing or two about life and risk. It seems, inhibition grows with age. The older we get, the more we seem to unlearn how to take risks. The more educated we get, the more reasons we can find to avoid risks. And most of all, the more experiences we’ve had in life that have hurt us, changed us, or impacted us, the more we will cling to our own version of a nest for fear of taking that chance again.

We humans are complicated creatures.

I call it getting “stuck.” Getting stuck is that psychological, mental, or spiritual place within you that declares that it’s safer to stay exactly where you are. We can get “stuck” in jobs that no longer nourish us, in relationships that no longer honor us, in habits that no longer help us, or in places that no longer sustain us. Getting “stuck” for us is complicated.

Some of us get “stuck” due to some form of grief, trauma, or fear-inducing experience. Some of us can get “stuck” because we lack self-confidence, self-motivation, or the big one, self-compassion.

One of the strangest things about humans is that we can learn “stuckness” the same way we learn self-critique or self-denigration. We internalize the messages others have given us through our difficult experiences or past traumas, and we believe, we cannot fly. And despite knowing it’s not good for us to stay where we are in life, we also, no matter how hard we try, cannot seem to move forward into a different sort of place. We are just “stuck.”

Chris Germer, the co-founder of a program called “Mindful Self-Compassion” says that when we experience difficulties in our past, when we feel alone and powerless, most of all when we are frightened to move forward, we do one of three things:  we fight (devolve into self-critique or critique/mistrust of the world around us), we flee the danger (we abandon ourselves altogether and give up on life), or we freeze (we get stuck ruminating over our plight unable to move backwards or forwards). Usually, we react with some form of all of these.

Anyone here ever feel “stuck”?  In a life-draining job? In a harmful relationship? In mundanity? In the past? In your grief? In old ways of doing things? In old habits that you can’t seem to break? In addictions?

We all have been “stuck” somewhere at one time or another.

The question is, “How do you get unstuck?”

Well, if we look at what we learned from the bird, we can get a few clues:

  1. We need to understand that we have outgrown our nest and have a life to live and a mission to fulfill.
  2. We need a helper, a goal, and a crutch.
  3. We need a push! We need confidence and assurance, someone to help us with what I call a “boost of faith.” We need that force behind us assuring us and reminding us that we do have wings, and we will fly.

In our scripture for today, we see Mark giving us two important stories about faith and risk back-to-back. In the first story, Jesus has just been in his home synagogue surrounded by jealous, taunting community members and relatives, jeering at him, taking offense at his ministry. And the scriptures tell us, “He could do no deed of power there, except that he laid his hands on a few sick people and cured them.” “He was amazed at their unbelief.”

Right after that, we learn that he continued to go among the villages of Galilee teaching. And then he called his inner posse, the “twelve,” and he gave them authority as well to heal and cleanse. He told them to take nothing for their journey except a staff. Now listen to this.  “No bread, no bag, no money, no extra clothing.”  Just a staff. If a place welcomed them, they should preach and heal. If they didn’t, they should just “shake the dust off of their feet” and move on. With that, they began to preach and heal.

People, if Jesus felt “stuck” and “paralyzed” and couldn’t be himself and carry out his ministry effectively among those who had no confidence or faith in him, why are you so hard on yourselves! Even Jesus had bad days, “stuck” days. In his ministry, even Jesus couldn’t reach everybody!

Guilt, shame, loss of confidence, blame, self-critique, fear –all of these can serve to paralyze us and cripple us in our lives, preventing us from living the life we were meant to live, reaching our full potential as human beings, carrying out the goals and cultivating the relationships that will ultimately fulfill us and feed us and help us grow. They are “wing-clipping,” “flight-crippling” feelings that prevent us from being whom God created us to be.

But lucky for us, we are not alone in our plight. We have a helper, an advocate, a holy parent, a buoyant staff to lean on. God. Jesus. The Holy Spirit of Christ. “Without him,” as Paul reminds us, “we can do nothing.” But with Him, we can do …anything! (John 15:5)

Jesus reminds us that we have a life to live and a mission to fulfill. He nudges us when we have outgrown our circumstances, our current condition, our past. And gives us the courage not to fear the future and the unknown. But Jesus doesn’t stop there. He stays with us, behind us, ahead of us, around us, and He encourages us to take that leap of faith. How does Psalm 23 go? “He restores our soul.” He restores our faith when our faith gets trampled, weak, tired, and fearful. And in the power of the Holy Spirit, He gives us a little push.

Jesus reminds us that in the power of the Holy Spirit, we can rest on the wings of the wind, soar with wings like an Eagle, and not worry about the end result.

This is a big one people. Because that’s where our fear really trips us up, isn’t it? We are afraid to take risks, because we equate risk with success and success with results. But the beauty of our relationship with God is that our life and our salvation is a gift. It’s not contingent on something we do or achieve. It’s not equivalent to a results-based record or a numbers-based goal. In fact, we don’t need to worry about results at all. All we need to do is jump out of the nest and fly. Start living life in the wide world. And God will do the rest.

Jesus gives his disciples in our scripture today the ultimate “off the hook.” There’s no pressure to perform. No requirement to succeed.  Even Jesus didn’t succeed in every place he went! The only thing they need to go is “go.” And they never go alone. For Jesus reminds them of His presence with the sign of the staff.

The staff –that shepherd’s symbol of guidance and care, that Aaron’s rod of healing and miracles, that steadfast sign of presence and assurance, that crutch to lean on and yolk to walk with, Jesus too has given us the ultimate sign of the staff –the very cross he died on. For even this hurdle could not stop Him from flying.

Even death cannot thwart Jesus from living. And it can’t for us either.

So what are we afraid of?

Today, I invite you to grasp the power of faith to fill you. The power of the Holy Spirit to propel you. And the power of the staff to lead you into new places and new experiences, into the vastness of the world, where you are called to be the Church.

With Jesus always beside you.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., by Lori Wagner