Prop: mustard seeds, brew pot
[Optional beginning: stew.... adding one small anise seed, or garlic flower, or mustard seed can radically change the taste of your stew, can transform it in fact.]
As we come into the new year, many of us have plans stewing, ideas brewing, and we mean to go forward with resolutions in hand and resolve in order. We want to change our lives. We want to alter our behavior. We want to make things happen. We want to move mountains.
And yet, our scriptures for today would challenge those well-intentioned plans and blueprints. For what does the scripture tell us when Jesus’ frustrated disciples tried in vain to exorcise a demon? When they found, they couldn’t do it….
“Afterward the disciples came to Jesus privately and asked, “Why couldn’t we drive it out?” “Because you have so little faith. He answered. “For truly I tell you, if you have faith the size of a mustard seed, you can say to this mountain, ‘Move from here to there,’ and it will move. Nothing will be impossible for you.” …(Matthew 17:19-20)
Wow!
All we need is a little bit of faith.
Notice, it doesn’t say well-made plans or astute strategies, or lots of resolve, or lots of assistance. Jesus simply says….all you need is a little bit of faith. Just the size of a mustard seed.
Anyone see a mustard seed? I have one here. Very tiny. The tiniest seeds you’ve ever seen I’ll bet. That’s all the faith you need. Why?
Because Jesus does all of the work. That’s what faith is all about. It’s not about how well we can do something, or about how many of us try. It’s not even about how much time we spend doing it. It’s only about that little bit of faith we have that Jesus CAN do it.
All we need to do is put our trust in Him. And the rest is in God’s hands!
A little bit of prayer outweighs the best of our own plans.
Wow! That seems so easy, doesn’t it? So why do we try so darn hard? Our own efforts will almost always only come back to bite us. Cause our own motives are usually far from pure. And God’s mission is always going to go forward no matter what we do! We can work with Him or work without Him. But God will always make good even out of our rottenest messes!
We always have plans stewing. So, did Jacob. So did Herod. And yet our best laid plans cannot thwart what God is up to. God’s mission always prevails over our best plans.
In our story lectionary reading today about Jacob and Esau, Jacob and Rachel had plans stirring in the pot. While Jacob stirred up a red lentil stew filled with deceit, desire, and deflection, God had plans to use Jacob’s jockeying for position toward the glory of Israel. Later, Jacob would struggle to walk in God’s way. He had to emotionally stew in his own juice before he could partake of God’s promised feast of the Promise Land. He had to, so to speak, eat his own stew, taste his own sin, partake of his own fault, break his own body through his struggle with God in order to redeem his position. For with God the first shall be last. And the last first.
Humility of spirit is the sacrifice God desires.
But like Jacob, many of us do things the hard way. Instead of a little bit of faith, we opt for a lot of stubbornness, a good deal of gumption, and a whole lot of broken relationships, before we finally let God in to clean up our mess and help us walk in faith.
And yet God is always there ready to pick us up again, set us on our feet, lead us to those cool, still waters that lie within our reach once we grasp onto that little bit of faith, that little bit of God.
We can stew all we want. We can come up with our own recipes for our lives. We can concoct our own plans for the future. But God will always prepare our feast for us. Our puny efforts will not prevail if we are to live the promises of God.
In our gospel for today, we are confronted by God’s gift of salvation in the person of Jesus, God’s personal invitation to have a little bit of faith in God’s mission of salvation for all people. In Jesus, God extends a hand. All we need to do is accept the invitation, and with that little bit of faith, recognize His presence, His power, His glory in our lives and in our world.
For some it would be easy. For others, hard. For Herod, it would be very, very hard indeed! But no matter what Herod does, how he schemes, how he plans, he does not thwart God’s salvation mission.
God had a “way” intended for Jesus. Jesus would BE the way of God in the world. And nothing Herod did would get in the way of God’s mission to open the door of salvation for all who would enter in with the faith of a mustard seed.
Yet while Simeon and Anna were prophesying, while those they told were hoping, while those who recognized Him were celebrating, Herod was already stewing.
In his later years, Herod had become more and more paranoid, vicious, nihilistic, narcissistic. With ten wives, his sons all vied for his kingdom. No wonder he felt threatened with all that drama and danger encircling him. But his answer was to kill anyone and everyone who dared approach or encroach upon his power, even his own sons.
Remember how Rachel had been stewing and scheming with Jacob on how to trip up Esau? That blasted red stew! So too was Herod stewing about his declining health, his enemies, and the underground rumblings and rumors about a soon-to-be-born king. Most tried to keep the prophecies from Herod. Indeed, it seems, Anna’s and Simeon’s prophecies didn’t reach his ears. The secret was well contained among those waiting for messiah.
That would all change with the arrival of the magi, who would seek Herod out for directions to Bethlehem. Once Herod got wind of the promised child, his stewing turned to boiling. He quickly hatched a murderous plot, most likely the last of his life, as he would die soon after.
Herod was a shrewd politician. To placate the Jews, he rebuilt the Jerusalem Temple. To placate Rome, the “hellenistic king” tried to keep peace in Jerusalem through fear and trepidation. So, while appeasing the Roman authorities, Herod allowed the Jerusalem leadership to flourish as long as they gave him due attention. He later realized however that the Jerusalem leadership were rather ungrateful for his protection and may not be planning to mourn his impending death as he had hoped. In fact, the priests and Pharisees and scribes were fearing the unstable “king,” and they brazenly looked forward to his passing. In response, Herod gave them “something to cry about.”** He locked hundreds of the Jewish leadership, one from each household it is said, into his hippodrome, and set them on fire, killing them all.
“I would rather be Herod’s pig (hus) than his son (huios),” quipped Augustus. (Pigs were not consumed by the Jews.) Your best bet therefore in Jerusalem was to be someone Herod was not a bit interested in. If he saw you as a contender, or worse, as a threat, you wouldn’t last very long.
Josephus, the historian who tells us much we know about Herod the Great, does not mention the slaughter of innocents per se. But Herod’s paranoia and his killing of so many close to him makes the massacre probable. Only perhaps 12-15 babies that age may have been born in Bethlehem and region at that time, half female, half male. Did Herod slaughter six to eight young male babies in order to ensure that a “king” would not threaten his reign?
Luke assures us that he did. Herod was mercurial, a volcano ready to blow so to speak. It wouldn’t have taken much after he heard about the new “king” born in Bethlehem to issue the order that Luke tells us he did.
Those male babies were the first martyrs to Jesus.* And likely, a haunting and humbling realization, when he learned of that story later from his father Joseph. Jesus’ birth came at a high price --- the cost of children’s lives.
Herod dies somewhere between 4-2 BCE. The slaughter would have taken place somewhere close to 4 BCE when Jesus is approximately 1 or almost 2.
Jesus is presented 40 days after his birth at the Temple. The prophecies about him indicate that many will rise and fall because of him. Those children were the first to fall.***
And yet the seeds of hope had already been planted. God’s Son had been firmly planted within the world –a mustard seed of hope that would grow into a world-wide movement and today’s global Church.
Herod thought he could stomp out that little seed of faith. Surely one child could be reckoned with. But Herod was no match for God. Nor would he ever be prepared for what that little seed would someday become.
Already when Jesus is born, even before the magi encounter Herod, he is becoming exceedingly paranoid, murderous, and dangerous. Both Simeon and Anna would have known Herod’s murderous personality well. They would have laid high hopes on this child, with both mother and father descended from the line of David. He was the protected child, the one in the line for the messianic inheritance. Much would be expected of him. Much would be hoped.
Besides the massacre of the innocents and Herod’s murderous rages, there was additional turmoil in the world when Jesus emerged on the scene.
People were prophesying a coming messiah who would put things right in the Jewish community. The Romans could punish terribly, especially when uprisings happened. And often they did. The people wanted freedom, and hoped for peace. They hoped for a king who would displace Herod and his sons. Later Herod’s son Archelaus embarked on his own killing spree. It was for this reason that Joseph decided not to return to Bethlehem but to take his family under the radar into the area of Nazareth in Galilee, outside of Archelaus’s jurisdiction, as we learn from Matthew.
One could say in fact that the more turmoil brewed, the more people relied upon prophecy in order to get them through. But prophecy is in a sense like a pot of porridge or lentil stew. You know something is going to emerge, but you’re not quite sure what it is, how it will taste, or when it will be ready.
For God’s stewpot is a mysterious brew. It’s not our own soupy forecast that we announce in the prophetic statement. But it’s really a statement of faith, relying on God’s providential movement that we are forecasting, based in scripture, based in what we know about God, based in the identity of Jesus, and based in the knowledge that God’s mission for the world is so much bigger than ours.
The reuniting of all of Israel in the time of the messiah --this may be part of Anna’s prophetic vision. Luke clearly states that Anna was from the tribe of Asher, which was evidently not entirely lost at that time. The hope of many may have been to recover God’s people from those northern tribes who had been integrated or lost through the years. The awaited messiah would be an “inter-national” messiah, not just a tribal messiah of Judah.
Asher, a tribe of high priests, would be the prophetic voice to welcome the messiah and spread the word that the messianic hope had been fulfilled. Anna, one of the many women of the New Testament to witness to Jesus is a true prophetess in the vein of old, as a new era is welcomed in, in which God again is moving and speaking to His people.
Anna spread the word that God had sent a messiah for the redemption of Jerusalem. But God’s plan was so much bigger. Her prophetic voice calls our attention to the child Jesus, the one who would change the world. But no one yet knows exactly how or in what way God will move and work that miracle. And yet the joy is real.
What does it mean to be prophetic in a time of turmoil? What does it mean to be prophetic in our own time of turmoil?
We need to remind people of the nature of faith, faith that God has something stirring and moving in our lives and in our world, and that it has to do with hope, love, peace, and joy. Faith is “the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1).
That is where we start. Faith.
For a mustard seed of faith, just a little bit of faith in the vast power and mission of God, is more powerful than a thousand tsunamis, more lasting than millions of years of history, more enduring than the hardest gemstone. Just a little bit of faith in God’s amazing power can release God’s potential in the world and in our lives in ways we can never imagine!
We may not know exactly how or when God will raise the Church to new heights and pierce the hearts of the needy. But we can be assured, and can assure others, that something in the world is stirring. God is still moving. And like everything God creates, whatever happens, it all will be very, very good.
*2015 interview by Tony Reinke with Paul Maier on the slaughter of innocents and the historical Herod the Great.
**Paul Maier
*** Jesus born 6-4 BCE. Herod does just before Passover (April 11) 4 BCE. Jesus dies between 30-33 CE when he is between 35 and 38 years old.
Based on the Story Lectionary
Major Text
Jesus’ Presentation in the Temple and the Prophecies of Simeon and Anna (Luke 2:22-40)
Minor Text
Cain’s and Abel’s First Fruits Sacrifice (Genesis 4)
The Story of Jacob and Esau and Their Father’s Firstborn Blessing (Genesis 27)
The Consecration of the First Born (Exodus 13)
A Woman’s Purification Sacrifice (Leviticus 12)
God’s Firstborn Requirements (Numbers 3)
The Levite’s Responsibility for God’s Sacrifices (Numbers 18)
Psalm 55: The Anguished Heart
Psalm 74: The Desire of the Lord to Save
Psalm 68: The Desire for God to Prevail
On Prophecy (2 Peter 1)
Jesus is Presented in the Temple
When the time came for the purification rites required by the Law of Moses, Joseph and Mary took him to Jerusalem to present him to the Lord (as it is written in the Law of the Lord, “Every firstborn male is to be consecrated to the Lord”), and to offer a sacrifice in keeping with what is said in the Law of the Lord: “a pair of doves or two young pigeons.”
Now there was a man in Jerusalem called Simeon, who was righteous and devout. He was waiting for the consolation of Israel, and the Holy Spirit was on him. It had been revealed to him by the Holy Spirit that he would not die before he had seen the Lord’s Messiah. Moved by the Spirit, he went into the temple courts.
When the parents brought in the child Jesus to do for him what the custom of the Law required, Simeon took him in his arms and praised God, saying: “Sovereign Lord, as you have promised, you may now dismiss your servant in peace. For my eyes have seen your salvation, which you have prepared in the sight of all nations: a light for revelation to the Gentiles, and the glory of your people Israel.”
The child’s father and mother marveled at what was said about him.
Then Simeon blessed them and said to Mary, his mother: “This child is destined to cause the falling and rising of many in Israel, and to be a sign that will be spoken against, so that the thoughts of many hearts will be revealed. And a sword will pierce your own soul too.”
There was also a prophet, Anna, the daughter of Penuel, of the tribe of Asher. She was very old; she had lived with her husband seven years after her marriage, and then was a widow until she was eighty-four. She never left the temple but worshiped night and day, fasting and praying.
Coming up to them at that very moment, she gave thanks to God and spoke about the child to all who were looking forward to the redemption of Jerusalem.
When Joseph and Mary had done everything required by the Law of the Lord, they returned to Galilee to their own town of Nazareth. And the child grew and became strong; he was filled with wisdom, and the grace of God was on him.
Image Exegesis: The Metaphor of the Rock: “Our Rock and Our Redeemer” or “Stumbling Stone and Snare”
This is what the Lord says to me with his strong hand upon me, warning me not to follow the way of this people: “Do not call conspiracy everything this people calls a conspiracy; do not fear what they fear, and do not dread it. The Lord Almighty is the one you are to regard as holy, he is the one you are to fear, he is the one you are to dread. He will be a holy place; for both Israel and Judah he will be a stone that causes people to stumble and a rock that makes them fall. And for the people of Jerusalem he will be a trap and a snare. Many of them will stumble; they will fall and be broken, they will be snared and captured.” Bind up this testimony of warning and seal up God’s instruction among my disciples. I will wait for the Lord, who is hiding his face from the descendants of Jacob. I will put my trust in him. Here am I, and the children the Lord has given me.
We are signs and symbols in Israel from the Lord Almighty, who dwells on Mount Zion. --Isaiah 8:11-18
This will be a sign to you!
The metaphor of the rock is for us one of the primary signs not just of who Jesus is, but that his coming means business! God’s business! And we’d better sit up and pay attention!
Jesus is our Rock. Our rock and our redeemer. What does that mean for us in our lives today?
It’s easy to pass that sentence off, as just a clever metaphorical twist, a powerful statement about the identity of Jesus. But this is more than metaphor. These are prophetic words, and no more prophetic then as they still are now.
In our scripture for today, the prophet Simeon tells us that Jesus is to be a sign that will be spoken against, so that the thoughts of many hearts will be revealed.
Spoken against, not in the sense of negativity, but in the sense that something has come into our line of vision that can’t be ignored, and whether we say yea or nay about Him, Jesus must be acknowledged. The way we “speak” about Jesus when we are confronted by His truth will reveal the nature of our hearts!
Today, may our own hearts be revealed in and through our relationship with Jesus. For He is the pivot stone!
Similar to Simeon’s prophetic statement, Jesus himself notes that he will be a stumbling block to many. Yet He will also be the cornerstone for many who will be built upon Him now and in the time to come.
Jesus is to be a “sign” ….spoken against…. so that the thoughts of many hearts will be revealed. No more secrets. No more hypocracy. Jesus is like the looking glass into which we all must look and see ourselves reflected. What looks back at us reveals the truth of how we feel about God.
We learn from Simeon that we are either a “stone” “with” Jesus, broken to be re-formed into beautiful gemstones. Or we are crushed beneath Him, and cast to the side as gravel beneath the feet of the Saints to be trodden under. But one way or another, we all must contend with Jesus.
Jesus will be a “sign” spoken against.
How malleable are you in your relationship with God? Are you a stone that can be re-formed? Or has your heart hardened and are you unyielding? Jesus identity will be revealed in the way the divine Potter can use you and remake you. Everything and everyone will be revealed in its nature by and within their relationship to Jesus. For those who accept Jesus, He becomes their cornerstone, and they become stones in His spiritual Temple. They are blessed by the Holy Spirit and broken to be remade. For those who reject Him, he becomes a stumbling stone, for those who cannot free themselves of their “set in their ways” opinions, mindsets, and conditions.
Will you be broken or will you be crushed? Those are the only two options, with brokenness being the chosen route. For out of brokenness comes beauty. Out of our weakness comes God’s greatest strength and glory.
The “sign” of Jesus is before us, our Rock and our Redeemer. To be redeemed then is to be re-formed, recreated, re-established, re-deemed.
In this prophecy about signs, Simeon does not merely give us more Hebrew signs that “point” to Jesus. We all know the “signs” of messiah, first for the shepherds, the child wrapped in swaddling clothes, the manger in which he lay, then the sign of the star that led followers to Him later. These all would be messianic signs. Signs of scripture would verify his identity. The signs of his heritage would be sealed by his genealogy. Many would recognize those signs pointing to the child who would be born.
But Simeon says something more. Jesus Himself will be a “sign.” His identity will be a sign of God’s salvation plan. And those who encounter Jesus will either be broken and saved or will stumble and be crushed (Matthew 21). Will our eyes be open? Our ears ready?
“He will be our holy place,” to quote Isaiah. Place will no longer be the physical Temple, the physical sacrifice, the physical synagogue, the physical church that exists in time and place. Our “holy place” will be Jesus Himself. And when we allow Him to live his Truth within us, we become part of God’s holy kingdom.
Jesus is Truth. Truth, not our truth, but God’s Truth, and it is this truth that confronts us this day!
Jesus is no longer some historical figure, or a scriptural metaphor, or even just a prophecy. Jesus is here in the flesh and blood. And the Truth of God’s presence confronts us with a blatancy and potency that we cannot deny.
God is with us. Jesus is here. He is our truth. God in the flesh. Now God confronts us with a question: Are you with Me or against Me?
No longer mere metaphor, we can’t just worship the Jesus of scripture or the Jesus of history, the Jesus of legend, or Jesus the great teacher.
Jesus is so much more than that.
Jesus is real. Jesus is our place, our holy place, and He will be our Temple. We will either become part of Jesus’ Truth, or we will stumble and be crushed by it. But the truth of Jesus confronts us!
The truth of who He is, the truth of God’s presence and power in the world, confronts our lives with a question, “Will you love Me? Or will you deny Me? Which will it be?”
The truth of Christ confronts us. And our hearts will be revealed in the way we answer.
On which side of that truth will we choose to fall? That is the question that confronts us all.
Peter tells us Jesus is “a stone of stumbling and a rock of offense” (1 Peter 2:8). Paul explains to us, “Jews demand signs and Greeks search for wisdom, but we preach Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and foolishness to Gentiles…The message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing but to us who are being saved it is the power of God” (1 Corinthians 1:23 and 1:18).
Jesus is the “skandalon,” the stumbling block or spring of a trap more succinctly that can snare us if we merely see him as another “sign” or a “great teacher” and miss who He is and who He has the power to be in our lives and in our world.
We see through a glass dimly. We all do. What we see can compel us. What we can’t see can confound us.
Simeon calls us to prophetic awareness in asking us to “see” Jesus for who He is in the world –the ultimate Sign of God’s presence, the Savior of the world.
Jesus is the way. The Door. The Gateway. All we have to do is open our eyes to the Truth of His presence as Way, Truth, Life of God’s salvation.
Think of it this way. You are driving through the mountains. You encounter a wall of rock. You can either risk going through the tunnel within it, or you can bash yourself into it trying to make your own way through it. But either way, you have to contend with the Rock that is in your path.
Jesus is that rock. He has come into our path by the love and grace of God. And those who will not recognize Him as the “way” will bash themselves against Him trying to make their own way. For no one get to the Father except through the Son. Jesus is the “way” forward. And the “way” through. The way heavenward. And the way to God’s kingdom. He is the gate to the sheepfold, the green pastures, and the still waters. He is the Tree of Life beyond the gateway to the garden. Only his yoke brings the promise of rest and the Promised Land of peace.
Bottom line. There is no way forward without Jesus.
Contend with Him. Struggle with Him. Cry out to Him. But above all, recognize Him for who is he. For Jesus is the gateway to God, the door to the kingdom.
We live in a world of conflict. The pot of contention is steaming and ready to boil over in many ways.
How will we prophesy Jesus to a world in conflict?
Perhaps we continue to take Simeon’s prophecy to heart. Be confronted by the Truth of God!
The Truth has not changed, nor strayed, nor wavered.
The Rock is before us. Help others see the Way through the barriers and blockages of life in 2018.
Lift up Christ.
Follow Jesus.