Showing posts with label Proverbs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Proverbs. Show all posts

Sunday, November 12, 2017

Wisdom Appears to Us On Our Paths

The Rev. Kathi Johnson
C Lectionary 32 – 12 November 2017
Text: Proverbs 8:1-11; Wisdom 6:12-16
Our Redeemer Lutheran Church, Grand Prairie, Texas

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My sermon text today is primarily the reading from Proverbs 8.

A couple of years ago, I had the honor of walking with a family as the matriarch’s health declined and she prepared to die. My friend Vicki’s mother, Prue – short for Prudence – was 100 years old when she died, and Vicki asked me to lead her memorial service.

As we began planning the service together, Vicki brought out notes, written in Prue’s own handwriting, giving us instructions for the service. The notes were written confidently, asking us to sing a favorite hymn of hers. But Prue added one very specific direction for the singing of this hymn: DON’T DRAG.

And that was Prue. Up until the last few weeks of her life, she didn’t drag, and so it’s fitting that she would tell us not to drag, either.

There is wisdom in these words of Prudence, telling us not to drag. “Sing it,” she’s saying, “And don’t mess around. Don’t drag these words about Jesus out of your mouth. Sing. Proclaim. Tell it.” There is an urgency in her instruction.

There’s another Prudence character who appears in several ancient writings as a woman named Wisdom. One of these documents is called the Book of Wisdom. This two thousand year old Greek text, written by an unknown author, describes the character of Wisdom as “radiant and unfading…easily discerned by those who love her, and…found by those who seek her.”

As presented here, Wisdom sits at the gate of the city, ready and waiting to be found by those who are looking. We may not know who wrote about Wisdom in this text, but the writer introduces Wisdom to the reader, just like I would introduce you to someone you don’t know.

 Similarly, in our own Scriptures, the book of Proverbs introduces Wisdom as a woman walking all around the ancient streets - streets that are filled with people. She’s raising her voice, she’s calling out, she’s taking a stand – she really wants us to hear her:

“You are so limited in your thinking!” she says. “If you’re lacking wisdom, you can learn from me – I am Wisdom, in the flesh!”

Why? What does Wisdom offer to us? Why should we listen to Wisdom?

She tells us why – because Wisdom speaks honorably, she always speaks up for the right, and she won’t ever lie to us. Did you hear that last one? In a world that is full of lies, Wisdom won’t ever be untruthful. Wisdom will always say words that are just and straight as an arrow. The words of Wisdom won’t go from truth to untruth back to truth again.

There’s another character appearing in Proverbs – the character that I’ll call Foolishness. Foolishness is the one who leads our hearts off track, and eventually, Foolishness will cast us down – way down.

Last Sunday morning, a small, rural church community gathered for worship, not unlike how we gathered here. Their worship of God was interrupted by horror and injury and death.

In response to this incident, a local group called the Grand Prairie Police and Clergy Coalition held an emergency meeting this past week. The room was full to overflowing with officers and clergy, and one of the Grand Prairie SWAT officers gave a brief presentation on church safety. My own heart was heavy within me as I listened and reflected on the plans we must now discuss and implement in our churches, and in our schools, and really, in every public meeting place - all in order to try to be more safe.

It is Foolishness who leads us to think that all of the violence in our world will go away simply by wishful thinking. Foolishness says that we can have all the freedom we want, without much responsibility or many consequences. 

So where is Wisdom to be found? She’s there, too. Foolishness is seductive and is sometimes noisier, but Wisdom is there, too. Wisdom is found in people who take a stand and say, “We have had enough of Foolishness.” Wisdom is found in those who remind us that the choices we make today shape our world tomorrow.[1] Wisdom is found most of all in the very love of God for us, and in the love we offer to those around us.

Because, if you think about it, Wisdom walks hand-in-hand with Love. And they don’t drag – they walk side-by-side, leading us to action, so that violence and hatred will not win the day. 

If we try to understand Wisdom’s ways, we will learn from them, especially if we remember that Wisdom’s constant companion is Love. There is much in our world that calls us away from Wisdom, and much that calls us away from Love – but we cannot allow the Foolishness of this world to seduce us away from God’s Wisdom. Loving others depends on it.

Out of deep and abiding love for us, God has shown us the ways of Wisdom, and God calls us to live with Wisdom. In the Book of Wisdom that I mentioned earlier, Wisdom appears to us in our paths, and she meets us in our every thought. And so, we find that Wisdom is ready and willing to be a part of our everyday lives – she is ready and willing to be a daily practice for us, to inform our every idea, our every question, our every concern. Wisdom is there, with us.

Over the days, and weeks, and months to come, in what ways can you grow in Wisdom? 

How is God calling you to leave aside the ways of Foolishness and to follow the ways of Wisdom?

Amen.
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[1] An adaptation of a quote one of my church members – Julie Bothun - uses with the high school students she teaches: “The choices you make today shape your world tomorrow.”

Sunday, October 26, 2014

Trust in the Lord with all your heart...


The Rev. Kathi Johnson
Reformation Sunday and Confirmation 
Text:s Proverbs 3:1-6 (includes Confirmation verses) and Psalm 46
Our Redeemer Lutheran Church, Grand Prairie, Texas

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Grace and peace are yours, from God our Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.

I’d like you to think back to when you were a child or a teenager and try to remember words of wisdom that your elders gave you. What were some of those things…?

The book of Proverbs is basically a collection of all these kinds of pieces of wisdom from others - little snippets of advice from our elders – thirty-one chapters’ worth. Even though Proverbs is attributed to Solomon, most scholars now believe that this book actually contains the collected wisdom from hundreds of years, from different sources. So this book is similar to what we’d have if we collected all the pieces of wisdom that we shared a few moments ago…[such as…whatever you thought of!]

Much of the book of Proverbs is dedicated to educating youths, specifically, in the ways of following God (although the book makes it clear that this is good wisdom for anyone to follow – not just young people). Today’s lesson begins with this resounding call: “My child, do not forget my teaching but let your heart keep my commandments…” and when the child protested or rolled his or her eyes, the writer continued, “for length of days and years of life and abundant welfare they will give you.”

In other words, it is good for us to listen to those who are wiser than we are because we can learn from them. Sometimes younger people listen to older people, and sometimes older people listen to younger people. Words of wisdom can come from almost any age, and from places that we least expect it. The book of Proverbs wants us to seek out wisdom – to seek it out and to find it and to listen to it.

The beauty of a community like a church is that we have different generations gathered under the same roof. It is in learning from others that we have lives that are abundant.

It is appropriate that Lynnlea has chosen two of the verses read earlier as her Confirmation verses: “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not rely on your own insight. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths.”[1] Ringing through the ages, over thousands of years, is the wisdom that rings out to us today: that we should trust in God at all times, in every way.

If only it were that simple! Because we don’t always trust God at all times and in every way. We often trust our own insights, and our own ways. We often think of God as some sort of holy vending machine, dispensing whatever we want or whatever we think is best. When we get the wrong thing, we begin to question and we begin to doubt. We can appear faithless. We can even become faithless.

But instead of becoming faithless, I invite us to try another way: the way of trusting God, even when we don’t see what God is up to. I invite us to use all of our questions and all of our doubts as a way of seeking out what God is up to in our lives.

Sometimes, when I am up to here with my questions and doubts, they begin to swirl around my head, like I am trapped in some sort of whirlpool. It is at that point when I hear God say, “Be still, and know that I am God,” which is from our psalm today. “Be still and know that I am God,” which can also be translated as “Stop!” or “Be quiet! and know that I am God.”

God is God – and throughout time, God has shown himself to be interested in loving relationship with us, not as the dispenser of all things good, bad, and in between, but as one who dwells with us. One who is present with us in the good, the bad, and the in between.

This loving relationship between us and God is a tremendous gift. Many of you have heard me say before: that when we are baptized, we are marked as Christ’s own forever. This is the baptismal faith which Lynnlea is reaffirming this morning; this is the baptismal faith which has held her throughout her life, and will continue to hold her as she gets older. It is the faith that holds all of us. Through times of questions and doubts, through times of certainty and deep faith, God is with us.

“Trust in the Lord with all your heart…”

Amen.

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[1] Proverbs 3:5-6