Alleluia! Christ is risen!
Abide in me, Jesus says. What does Jesus mean when he says that, I
wonder? The picture Jesus gives his disciples to help us understand is a
vine with branches. We are the branches, and that is what Jesus says
abiding looks like: branches on a vine. So one grape says to the other
grape: “You know, if it wasn’t for you, I wouldn’t be in this jam.” The
other grape replies: “You know I’ve about had it with you. All day
long with you it’s wine, wine, wine.” (I know, I know...I'm
'pressing.')
“I am the vine, you are the branches,” Jesus says.
That we are the branches tells us that Jesus is our source and our
center - and we talked about friendships centered on Jesus last week.
But the image of branches is also somewhat confusing because branches do
not decide to be centered on a vine - that branches are at all rests
solely on the action of the vine - the vine acts and makes it so.
If a branch could un-choose her connection to the vine, not only would
that branch not be a branch, the branch wouldn’t be anything else,
either. She simply would not be. Everything it means to be a branch
comes from being grown out of and connected to the vine - the good work
of the vine. Branches are not independent agents apart from this work.
So instead of “What does it mean to abide?” maybe the question is “If we
are like branches, and branches are automatically dependents of the
vine - always abiding - why is abiding something Jesus has to tell us to
do?” And maybe the most honest question behind both of the others is,
“What is the point of abiding?”
As a beginning of the answer to that last question especially, we need
to back up a bit to the chapter just before this morning’s lesson, where
there’s an important back-story that today’s lesson picks up.
In chapter 14 of John’s gospel, we find Jesus telling his disciples that
he is about to leave his disciples. Jesus is about to die. Jesus
explains that, by the departure he will achieve through his death, he
goes to prepare a dwelling place for his friends - “in my Father’s house
there are many mansions (we might also use the word “rooms” or
“dwelling places” here)” and the word used for dwelling places shares a
root-word with our word “abide” in John 15.
Jesus goes on in chapter 14 to explain that the “room” he is preparing
for his friends - which again is a twin for our word “abide” - is the
gift of the Holy Spirit. Jesus leaves them in order to send his Holy
Spirit. To those who love and obey Jesus’ teaching, we’re told, Jesus
promises his Holy Spirit to the end that “my Father will love him, and
we will come to him and make our home with him.” So “dwelling place” -
which, to beat home the point, shares a root-word with “abide” - is
about receiving the Spirit and having the fullness of God come make a
home in the life of the one who receives it. The dwelling place made
possible by the Spirit is also about our being made able to find our
home in God.
It’s important, I think, that after saying all this Jesus gives his
disciples his peace and tells them that, knowing these things, they do
not need to be afraid.
So in chapter 14 we learn that Jesus goes to prepare a dwelling place
for us, and just because he goes off to prepare it does not mean we have
to go off to find it. Jesus isn’t just talking about heavenly rewards
when we die. Jesus will send his Spirit to his friends, and God will
make his home with them. The word for what’s being prepared is dwelling
places, but the effect here is a mutual indwelling. God’s home with us
and our home with God. In chapter 14, abiding is about the mutual
indwelling of God and God’s friends.
And we’ve heard this kind of talk before. We hear it in our eucharistic
prayers, when we pray that “he may dwell in us, and we in him.” Holy
Communion is meant to be a living picture of God in us and we in God.
And this is what it means to abide.
Among other things, abiding is a great relief. If abiding is about God
in us and we in him, then when we abide, we are free to give up our
repeated, lame, and tiring attempts to impress God, as if we could do
anything good apart from him. If we do as we’ve been told to do in the
gospel this morning - if we keep our home with him, abide in him - we
will not have anything with which to impress God for which we will not
also be moved to thank God.
And again, we’ve heard this before: in the words we say each week at the
early service: “All things come of Thee, O Lord, and of Thine own have
we given Thee.”
And abiding like this makes a certain kind of intuitive sense. When we
welcome someone into our house, for example, and tell them to “make
themselves at home” - a crude picture of what we’re calling “abiding”
this morning - we are giving both parties a mutual permission not to
impress one another. So I tell you to help yourself to the fridge, by
which you understand that I won’t be serving you - if you want it, you
get it - and also that I forego the right to complain when you take the
last of my favorite beer.
There’s a tender side to this, too. Rebekah has long counted it the
sign of a true friendship when a friend says, “Sure, come on over.
There will be laundry on the sofa but what the heck, you’re family.”
When God pitched his tent and made himself at home with us, he certainly
did not come to impress us. Isaiah tells us he was despised and
rejected, that we esteemed him not. Christ’s coming among us was the
beginning of the oblation - the pouring out - of himself, stooping in
love, in the end washing the feet of his friends, like a slave, before
his betrayal, rejection, and death.
Still, it is one thing to know this and another to live it, to enjoy
freedom from the temptation - almost like instinct - to continue putting
on a good show for God. “Lord, did you see that? Huh? Huh? Not so
shabby - I mean, you know, for me, all things considered, if I do say so
myself.”
But the mistake of our attempts to impress God is that we imagine a
distance between ourselves and God that God in Christ has bridged. God
is not simply interested in you; God lives inside you! Animates you!
Makes his home in you. Not perfectly, certainly, but that’s the
opportunity. But so often we’re all: “Yo God, did you see how I edged
and manicured the lawn? Those vacuum marks are fresh.” And God is all:
“mi casa es su casa.”
Now, hold on here. Does this mean that how we live our lives with God
is unimportant? This question is not unlike St Paul’s question to the
Romans: Should we therefore sin that grace may abound? Knowing that God
doesn’t care about my laundry, should I just wear the dirty
underpants? And the answer is the same as St Paul’s: Heck no!
But do you see - can you appreciate - the miracle that has been opened?
The conversation now when it happens, you and God at the table, will not
be about dirty dishes or all the chores you’ve complete or smudges on
the windows; it will be about the things that dear friends who have
given up impressing one another talk about. Matters that matter. Come
on over, appearances be darned, because there are things beneath
appearances that I long to share with you. So we knock on the door or
call too late. God answers the door with a yawn and a stretch. And we
say, “Your presence does not simply comfort me; your presence is a
challenge to me in all the best ways and toward the very best of who I
had hoped to become.” Like Simon Peter, we say “You alone have the
words of eternal life.” And he says to us in reply: “Make yourself at
home.”
The Spirit of God making it possible for him to dwell in us and we in him.
Long before Occupy Wall Street, there was what might be called the
original Occupy movement. It went something like this: “The Word became
flesh and made his dwelling among us.” The Word became flesh and
literally “pitched his tent” in our camp. God made a home with
humankind. We are blessed by God’s presence.
God’s abiding presence, his Holy Spirit, poured out on his people, we people, the People of God.
The lessons today teach us that, just as Easter came along unexpectedly
and shouted, “Wait, wait, the cross looks like the end but this is not
the end,” now we pick up the scent of Pentecost, just a few weeks off
now, and it, too, is shouting: “Wait, wait, Easter looks like the end,
but Easter is not the end! The power and life you saw in the risen Lord
is power and life meant for you, too! Jesus himself will breathe his
Spirit in you and God will make his home with you.
In your life, in my life, in the life of our church: if the Good News is
that God wants to bunk up, then out, out! with everything else that
gets in the way. Out with the idea that we’ve got to do this by
ourselves or it doesn’t count. Out with shame. Out with fear. Out
with backup plans and safety nets, like stockpiles of wealth and closets
full of things we might need someday. Give them to the ones who need
them now, because they need them now, and we need room.
And in this way we offer up our hands, our feet, our work, our lives,
our bodies, souls, our minds, our strength, with the expectation that
God in us will move them, move us, shape them, shape us, through the
great and unexpected fact that God has made his home with us.
It is because this indwelling is God’s delight, purpose, and stated goal
that we too seek to live lives whose delight, purpose, and stated goal
is no less than this: that he abide in us, and we in him.
Amen.
Sermon preached at St C's for Easter 5, May 6, 2012.