Thursday, June 13, 2024

like a mustard seed Proper 6 year B 16th June 2024

 2024  06  16  PROPER 6  Fourth Sunday after Pentecost  Year B

1 Samuel 15:34 - 16:13 and Psalm 20  •  2 Corinthians 5:6-10, (11-13), 14-17  •  Mark 4:26-34

 

Today we hear that the Kingdom of God is like a tiny mustard seed that grows to become such a great shrub that the birds of the air can make nests in its shade.  The Kingdom of God is a place of refuge… a place of sustenance, nurturing and growth.  Jesus tells us that this is the way it is, but do we view the Kingdom of God this way? And do others, see it that way?

 

I ponder how this Kingdom of God fits into the life of my friend who is struggling with years of trauma.  Years of trauma have seen her isolate herself from the church.  She recently booked herself into hospital for treatment.  My husband made the comment, “She needs Jesus”.  Ahhhh such a nice simple answer for such a complicated problem and I wish it really was that simple.  But this sudden and simple fix is not the story of the mustard seed.

 

We are told, and perhaps you know, that the mustard seed is actually very small.  But Jesus tells us that it grows to be a large tree – a source of life – nests for the birds.  So, what does this tell us about the Kingdom of God?

 

Those small seeds we plant in the kingdom of God- Our kindness to others, our church dinners, our care for those in need….  These, tiny and seemingly insignificant things, with the blessing of God, grow beyond what we can see, and in ways beyond our comprehension to become something so significant it will shock us.  

 

In the case of my friend, who my husband says, needs Jesus –she will receive Jesus through the gift of our friendship and care – We are in, and we bring the Kingdom of God -  that tree that brings life.  We trust that God will cause the Kingdom of God to give life to my friend.  But it will take time, and it doesn’t happen at all unless we step out in faith and BE the kingdom of God.

 

The growth of a tree takes time.  We can look closely at a seedling and not see the growing happening at all, but trees don’t generally grow from a seedling to a giant tree overnight.  It takes time… sometimes we see very little signs of growth – especially in the winter, and it takes care and watering… etc… to grow into a tree… and did I mention time. 

 

We tend to judge things by what we see physically.  After all we are physical creatures.  But our readings today encourage us to open our spiritual eyes and see the Kingdom of God – which is spiritual.

 

The readings for today cause us to ponder; How do we view others?  Do we look at their outward appearance and decide what kind of person they are based on the clothes they wear, their age, their looks, the sound of their voice, their ethnicity???  There are so many things that people can use to assume a picture of someone’s life, but today’s readings tell us something about these assumptions…. It isn’t the way that God looks at people.

 

This week I met my daughter’s boyfriend.  He is 38 and has a 21 year old son.  As he told me the age of his son, I noticed his expression, and sensed his discomfort at how I might perceive him.  It was obvious that he had already received much judgment and criticism.  Many of us have a past that we wish was different.  But for some of us, those mistakes haunt us and taint the perception that others have of us… and the image we have of ourselves.

 

 

Our prophet Samuel learnt something about this in our first reading. “…, he looked on Eliab and thought, "Surely the Lord's anointed is now before the LORD."  But the LORD said to Samuel, "Do not look on his appearance or on the height of his stature, because I have rejected him; for the LORD does not see as mortals see; they look on the outward appearance, but the LORD looks on the heart."”

 

Samuel had come to anoint a King for the nation.  He saw the young man Eliab and he looked impressive.  But God wasn’t impressed.  David, the youngest and most insignificant of the sons was the one who God chose.  He was still very good looking and probably quite impressive physically also, but his family didn’t think of him as being important, or significant. 

 

Most of us feel that we are not terribly significant. Significance in this world is so superficial… You might do something extraordinarily good and have your 15 minutes of fame and the next day it is forgotten.  Yet the mistakes we make seem more memorable.  Where is the Good News in that?   There isn’t any. 

 

But the Kingdom of God is different.  In the Kingdom of God, we are told that God knew us and formed us with purpose before we were born.  In the Kingdom of God, we are told that God loved us so much that he sent his son to die for us so that we can have eternal life.   In the Kingdom of God, we are of infinite significance.  Because of this we, like Saint Paul, should regard no one from a human point of view;” Therefore, instead of making assumptions, judging and dismissing, we understand that Christ loved and came to redeem all and that every life is so very precious to him.

 

Saint Paul tells us, “if anyone is in Christ, there is a new creation: everything old has passed away; see, everything has become new!”

 

This week, I read a prophetic post from Roma Waterman that said, “I don’t know who needs to hear this but you need to know you are not a failure. Don’t judge your whole life by one mistake you have made……..You have a future and a hope that is beyond all you can imagine waiting in your future. Keep going and don’t give up.”

 

The love of Christ urges us on because, as the scripture tells us, Christ died for all so that all might live – and live not for ourselves but for him.  This is a spiritual reality.

 

In our baptism we enter into Christ.   This term, “In Christ”, is a term that means that God the father now sees us as he sees Christ – that is, as His precious and perfect Child.  We enter into the royal family of God and we are of undeniable and incomprehensible importance and significance. We don’t just “Identify as a child of God”… we are a child of God. 

 

In our baptism we are born of the Spirit.  When we respond to, and receive the Gospel and choose to belong to God, our Spirit comes to life – is born, and we belong to God.  We are Children of the King.  As children of the King we are called to a royal role with the Kingdom of God, growing and being the Kingdom of God.  And like a mustard seed, that Kingdom grows to become a place of nurture for all those who need sustenance, shelter and rest.   We are loved and we are called.  We are a new creation and we grow the Kingdom of God here on Earth so that God’s Kingdom comes on earth as in heaven. 

 

Instead of a Kingdom where some feel excluded, the opposite is true.  It is a Kingdom of love, acceptance and belonging, where life can flourish.  Today we are invited to respond to that loving call of God, to work with him to grow the Kingdom of God, understanding that we are part of that tree of the Kingdom, and it continues to grow by stepping out in faith, even if it is with just the first tiniest step of faith

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