Sunday 31 December 2017

Beyond Resolutions (Gal 4:4-7)


(Homily for Gayton Road Christian Church's Worship on December 31, 2017, Christmas I)



Reading Beyond Rules

Reading begins with rules.  First you must know the letters and the sounds they make alone.  Then you need to know how the letters sound when they go together.  A “p” by itself sounds like p, but if you add an “h” to it, the sound transforms to f.  Longtime readers take these rules for granted, but if you stop to reflect on what it was like to learn them for the first time, you’ll remember just how crazy and complicated our language is.  The letter “g” makes the g sound, as in the word “go,” but it can also make the j sound, as in the word “gem,” or it can be silent as in the word “night” (“gh”) or “gnat” (the word that stumped me in the Spelling Bee once), or it can help make the f sound like in the word “laugh.” 

A number of years ago, I volunteered in the morning as a reading tutor at Carver Elementary School.  I remember my time with Ariana, a girl in the first grade.  At first, reading was something Ariana dreaded.  The rules were too complex and demanding.  Reading was work.  A chore, a burden.  All sweat, no smiles.

But one day something clicked.  Suddenly she didn’t want to throw the book away.  She wanted to turn the page.  What was the difference?  What had changed?  Certainly she was still making mistakes.  She still didn’t know all the rules of reading, and she still needed my help.  But whereas before she was fearful of the rules, of mistaking a pronunciation or getting a word wrong, now she had discovered a world beyond the rules.  She had discovered the joy of stories.    Now she cared more about what happened on the next page than about getting a word wrong here or there.  Sure, she still followed the rules of reading—that’s how you make out the right sounds, the right words.  But instead of worrying about the rules, she was relishing the twists and turns of the story.

Jesus and Our Coming-of-Age: Living Beyond Rules

In today’s scripture, Paul addresses the Galatians, a community of Christ-followers who have a problem.  Their problem is that they’re becoming a bit too rigid with rules.  In particular, they feel that to follow Christ, who was Jewish, you have to become Jewish, too, and follow all the Jewish laws.

But according to Paul, this misses the point.  Jesus came not to give us rules but to give us life. Jesus came not so that we might be perfectly programmed robots, following a set of unchanging rules, but so that we might have abundant life, in all its unpredictable and messy glory.  Paul explains this to the Galatians with two different metaphors.

First, Paul says that Jesus ushers us into our coming-of-age moment, where we move from being “minors” under a “disciplinarian” to being adults.[1]  This is the moment when we move beyond the rules.  Not against them, but beyond them.  In my mind, it’s like the moment when Ariana started reading not because she was concerned about all those crazy and complicated rules about letters and sounds, but because she had discovered the joy of words and stories and what happens next.  It’s like the moment when she stopped wanting to put the book down, and instead wanted to turn the page.  After Jesus is born into our world and into our lives, we begin to see things differently.  He shows us that life is a canvas for love, an opportunity for goodness.  Whereas before, we may have seen things like conflict and interruptions as a test or a challenge, where we must follow the rules or else, now we see these things as the material for new life.  We forgive old grudges and open the door to strangers not because of some rules,[2] but because we trust and hope that what happens next, when we turn the page, will be more life, not less. 

Jesus and Our Adoption: Living Beyond Resolutions

Next, Paul says that Jesus is our moment of adoption.  In other words, Jesus means that we belong.  I have a hunch that the reason the Galatians cared so much about rules in the first place is that they wanted to belong.  They wanted to prove themselves.  They wanted to fit in with the religious crowd, with all the Jewish followers of Christ. 

I wonder if resolutions are not a little bit like rules.  Here’s a list of the top five resolutions from 2017: exercise more; lose weight; eat more healthily; take a more active approach to health; learn a new skill or hobby.[3]  Basically, do more and eat less.  But why?  Certainly for good reasons, such as our health.  But in my experience, resolutions are also a way of proving myself.  They are a way to fit in.  They are a way to belong.  One of my perennial resolutions is to read more books.  Why?  Not for the joy of reading, which is a joy I genuinely feel, but so that I may prove to myself that I am the reader I say I am, that I fit in with the literary world, that I belong there. 

But this kind of resolution gets it backward.  I do in order to belong.  But when Jesus joined us, he gathered us with himself to become children of God.  Which means we already belong.  There’s nothing we need to do.  Just as God looked upon Jesus and said, “You are my beloved, in whom I am well pleased,” so God embraces us and calls us God’s beloved too.

Resolutions suggest to us that we should do something in order to belong.  But according to Paul, it’s the other way around.  We belong, and therefore we do!  In other words, we are not slaves to rules and resolutions, always trying to prove ourselves, to win the love of others.  We have the love of God, our Father and Mother in heaven, and so we live freely out of that love.  We live not out of human-made resolutions but out of divine inspiration.

I remember how whenever one of my former neighbors would mow the lawn, I would also see his son out with a toy lawn mower, mowing too.  I wonder if that’s sort of how our coming-of-age and our adoption through Jesus works.  We belong to God as sons and daughters.  And so we live like sons and daughters who revel in their parents’ love, who do what they do not out of fear or in order to prove themselves, but out of joy and inspiration from their parents.

Paul’s “Christmas” Story

Paul never tells the Christmas story in its traditional form, with Mary and Joseph and a manger.  Instead he tells it as a story of our own coming-of-age, where Jesus leads us into a world beyond rules, and as a story of our adoption, where Jesus gathers us into his family as children of God.  Perhaps these are the stories we need to hear as we step into a new year. 

Resolutions and rules are not a bad thing.  But they will not save us.  What will save us is the love that we already have.  What will save us is learning to say, “Abba!  Father!”  What will save us is living not in fear or self-striving, but in the freedom and inspiration of love, which leads us to live like our Father and to expect even greater things on the next page.

Prayer

Loving Father,
Tender Mother,
Whose heart aches for all the world:
Thank you for sending Jesus
Into our lives.
May he lead us
Beyond self-serving resolutions
To the inspiring call of your love.
May all that we do
Reflect the unchangeable truth
That we are yours.  Amen.



[1] Cf. Gal 4:1-4, where Paul sets up the metaphor of a minor who does not live fully in the world.  This metaphor draws further strength from the imagery in 3:24-26 of the law as a paidagagos, “teacher,” who was our guardian “until Christ came.”
[2] Cf. Gal 5:22-23.
[3] From a ComRes poll cited in Juliet Eysenck, “The Most Common New Year’s Resolutions—and How to Stick to Them,” http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health-fitness/body/common-new-years-resolutions-stick/, accessed December 28, 2017.

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