Hospitality
from the margins – the art of empowering
1 Kings 17:1-16 and Philemon 1-16 and Luke 10:1-16 (again)
This
morning I want us to think about hospitality from the margins, or, the art of
empowering. And I want to do that by focusing on a small word, a word that it
is easy to overlook, a word that you might not expect to have anything much to
say, but
a word on which the stories of our lives turn and turn again. I want us to
think about the three-letter-word ‘but’.
But
is an unwelcome ending, a falling short of what is required, a running out of
resources. In a drought-stricken land, Elijah finds provision from the mouths
of carrion birds, ‘But after a while the wadi dried up…’ There and then, the
prophet whose word could command clouds
discovers the limits of his ability to exert control in the world.
But
is a hesitation, a qualification of what we can offer, of what we can do. The
Lord comes to a widow living a marginal existence on the very margin of the
Promised Land and commands her to feed one of the greatest figures in Israel’s
history. Elijah comes to her for hospitality, ‘But she said, “As the
Lord your God lives, I have nothing…only…a little…for myself and my son, that
we may eat it, and die”’.
But
is a dying to self in the wilderness…and the rumour that death is not the end.
‘Elijah said to her, “Do not be afraid; go and do as you have said; but
first…and afterwards…”’ But is God’s intrusion into our
lives: the daring hope that we might be empowered to do what he has called on
us to do, first for the sake of others, and, in so daring, discovering renewed
life for ourselves.
But
is the fanfare announcement of redemption. Onesimus is a runaway slave, who
runs from himself – his name means ‘Useful’ but he cannot believe that he can
inhabit such an identity – and from his master’s god. Runs, only to run into
Paul, himself a slave of God, and so to be set free, for ‘Formerly he was
useless to you, but now he is indeed useful both to you and to me.’
But
is consideration, a bond of partnership, with others, and indeed with God. Paul
writes to Philemon, ‘I wanted to keep him with me…but I preferred to do
nothing without your consent…’
And
in our Gospel reading, but is an honest assessment of our
circumstances, that calls us to pray – “The harvest is plentiful, but
the labourers are few; therefore ask…” – and to go, as lambs in the midst of
wolves, trusting that the Good Shepherd is not far off;
but
(if not) is a guarantee, that peace will not be stolen from us, will not run
out;
but
(whenever) is wise instruction, for when disciples are not met with a welcome;
and
but
(at the judgement) is the reservation by God of the right to have the final
word over every protesting ‘But…!’
We
live in an uncertain world, a world that – from the most global to the most
local of concerns – turns and turns again on that little word but,
in all of its senses. And yet in the midst of our unknowable, unpredictable, uncertain
lives, something knowable, predictable, and certain also turns and turns again:
the revelation of Scripture, most fully manifest in the person of Jesus, that
God comes looking for us in the wilderness to transform our lives beyond what
we can possibly imagine.
I
see that written most large in the small deeds of kindness offered by a widow,
a man running from his past; and in the lives of those members of this
congregation who have stepped up in this past week to respond to the Lord’s
gracious command, and found themselves unlikely ambassadors of the kingdom of
God.
But
what about you? Where are you within the story today? Are you at an end, or a
beginning? Or do you find yourself at the turning-point in-between? What do you
need to hear from Jesus today? A word that gives courage, or wisdom? That sends
you out, or calls you back to him? Lent is a time to take time to be found, to
be loved, to be empowered. To discover that small can have enormous
significance. You may feel small, but…
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