Tuesday 7 July 2015

Sermon, Sunday 5 July: 'Tall Poppies'

1st READING: Ezekiel 2:1-5
2nd READING: Mark 6:1-13

SERMON ‘Tall poppies’
Let’s pray: may the words of my mouth, 
and the meditations of all our hearts be acceptable in your sight, 
O Lord, our strength and our redeemer.  Amen.

Consider the poppies of the field …                      
Their seeds stir beneath the wasted soil,     
Moving, reaching upwards,
breaking out and rising -                                                                    
Rising towards the sun.                                 
Consider the poppies of the field,                         
scattered red amidst the swaying,
golden barley -
tall, red, bold:                                      
prophets -                                                          
singing songs of praise to the Holy One.

Tall poppies.                                                            
It was one of those amazing purple-golden hazy late summer evenings.                               
I was on the bus, taking the very winding way home.  
Coming around a corner, a field filled with gently rippling barley –            
shimmering gold on that already golden evening…
and scattered throughout,
scarlet splashes – patches of glorious red poppies. 
Breathtaking. 
The landscape, a little like a prophet telling forth God’s wonders.                                
The bus stopped a moment to let me bask in the beauty of it all –
well, to pick up a couple of passengers,
but why let facts stand in the way of a nice story?!       
We drove on. 
The golden barley and the red poppies
fell away from sight.                              
I eventually got home…
still in a bit of a wonder about the interplay
of colour and landscape and light and...
sense of connection and yet mystery of God.
One of those ‘gosh’ moments – a ‘numinous’ moment.
It was years ago, and the picture stays with me still.

Tall poppies.                                                                                 
One of those terms we Aussies use to describe
people who have been extremely successful in some way:
fame, fortune, or however success might be
measured at any particular moment.                                          
Tall poppies:
people ‘outstanding’ in their field, as it were.                                                   
The kind of person who seems to come from out of nowhere –
from humble beginnings, or difficult background –
who has a particular talent or idea,                    
and sometimes, almost the air of the prophet about them –
though not always proclaiming the glory of God.                                       
People get wind of the story and it takes off -
or, in our age of social media and technology -
the story goes ‘viral’ and the ‘underdog’ is cheered on,                      
until, having succeeded, somehow, the crowds say:
‘enough.  You’re getting too big for your boots.                         
Who do you think you are, anyway?                           
We knew you when you were just a snotty-nosed kid
running about in nappies.’  
Popularity can be a fickle thing.
 
Tall poppies.                                                        
One thing common to both the poppies in the field
and the poppies who are people is that they’re torn down. 
The poppies are destroyed in the harvest by farmers,
and the other poppies are destroyed –
knocked back down to size by a harvest of jealousy or incredulity or cynicism.
I’m not a psychologist and I’ve never really
got my head around why people actually do this:
but it’s a strange human phenomenon,this so-called ‘tall poppy syndrome’. 

One sad element arising from it can be found in a comment made to me 
a long while back when I was working for a family caring for
two young teenage girls:
they were great – fun, pretty, kind and clever but…. 
one day the younger of the girls was talking about her school work:
she said she knew she could do better, a lot better in fact, 
but instead, did what she needed to in order to be in the middle –
she didn’t want to be top of the class:
she didn’t want to ‘stand out’ - that way led to bullying.                
…If you stand out, expect rejection.

Tall poppies.                                                        
‘Tall poppy syndrome’.                                    
Jesus knew what it was to be a tall poppy –            
to be different,                                                        
to be acclaimed …                                                   
to be rejected.                                                          
In our passage from the gospel of Mark this morning,
we get a glimpse of tall poppy syndrome unfolding in Nazareth,
where Jesus and the disciples have arrived.                                   
Nazareth: Jesus’ hometown.                                 
He is once again amongst family, friends – a warm, safe space of welcome.                   
The homecoming of the local boy ‘done good’. 
Except that this homecoming is not as welcoming, not as warm,  
and perhaps not even as safe a space as Jesus and the disciples may have wished for.  
            
As seemed to be his usual practice, Jesus went into the synagogue on the Sabbath,
and he began to teach.
He read from the book of the prophet Isaiah and the gathered crowd -
people who had grown up with him,
people who had known him all his life were amazed at his gracious words:
they were astonished.                                                  
You can almost see them looking at Jesus and then at each other, 
eyes slightly popping out of their sockets in surprise.                                           
Wow!                                                               
Gosh!                                                                  
Now there’s a thing!                                                       
And then the questions begin…                          
But how?                                                              
But why?...                                                          
But…          

And the growing tension and anger:                                                        
hang on, just a darned minute!                       
And then the statements, the labels, the rationalisations…accusations.
Who does he think he is, anyway?            
Joseph’s “son”…
something a bit dubious about that, as I recall.                                   
Well, I reckon he’s got some cheek to stand up there
and tell us how we should live our lives!  
Instead of wandering about the countryside he should be 
at home taking his family responsibilities seriously. 
Illegitimate…                                        
Irresponsible…                                                                         
Seemingly, there was a lot of offended muttering,
amidst the sound of feathers being well and truly ruffled.

And Jesus looked at them, and he, in turn was astonished;
astonished at their unbelief.                                                  
He spoke of prophets not being recognised,       
not being honoured in their home town
and that it had ever been this way in Israel’s history.   
He spoke of God’s love being wider than they imagined…
And they were infuriated.                                
So infuriated,                                                       
so angry that they were prepared to grab him
by the scruff of the neck and throw him off a cliff.          
And, taking the disciples, he quietly wandered off
to other villages teaching wherever he went.     
And then sent the disciples out in pairs. 
They were to stick their heads above the parapet,
they were to talk about the good news of the message of God, 
and in doing so, to stand out and to be rejected
like tall poppies.                                                                
If you stand out, expect rejection…      

Tall poppies.                                                    
Prophets –                                                        
People with a message…                                    
Tall poppies make us uncomfortable.
Down through the ages prophets have had a reputation
for being a bit odd,                                     
a bit prickly,                                                             
a bit … challenging.                                                 
And the message of Jesus was challenging:           
so challenging that as we’ve heard,
the people in Nazareth took offence -
Jesus angered them with his message -                                                         
the message to go out and proclaim the reign of God 
regardless of cost to self,                           
regardless of the bonds of family ties…         
To leave their comfort zones and to live the message
by engaging in healings and exorcisms,
and by setting the prisoners and the oppressed free.  
To be bearers of the good news of the breaking in
of God’s reign both in word and deed;                                                                
To be and bear good news for the poor even if it meant 
leaving all you’d ever known in order to proclaim it.[1]                   
And if they didn’t - didn’t listen, didn’t go -      
if they rejected the news and the mission,
well, as Jesus reminded them from their holy book,                                                               
God would go elsewhere, choose others.

But, why were they infuriated?     
Jesus was challenging the very structure of society,
and community, and family.                          
Saying uncomfortable things to those who thought of themselves
as chosen, as special;                                                       
who looked out at the world and perhaps felt they
were a cut above the rest,                                            
a little bit better,                                                         
and who, because of that, 
perhaps imagined God’s love being available only to them.    
And Jesus was turning that idea on its head.        
He was almost scandalising them by saying
that God’s love went beyond their boundaries – 
that they couldn’t ring-fence God in and keep God for themselves.  
And in response, society, community, and even family, 
ultimately rejected the message.                             
It was just… too much.                                                                      

And the message of Jesus is still challenging…   still… infuriating.                                       
Because the message of the breaking in of God’s reign
is one which overturns the whole way society currently functions.   
The scandal of the message is that it proclaims 
the breaking down of systemic structures of power that reek and creak
and which are rotten to the core.                                                                      
It is a message of liberation of the oppressed,
it is the message that there is another, better way: 
it is the message of love –                                      
God’s love for the world and humanity;              
our love for our neighbour,                                 
and love for ourselves –                                
which goes beyond, which goes deeper,
even than the way we understand family ties. 
In one sense, it enlarges family to include the whole of humanity and creation…                
The scandal of the message is about love –            
love that doesn’t create a fence in order to keep people out
but love that breaks down the fence:            
a radically inclusive love which liberates all of us,
taking us beyond our boundaries and way of being. 
And it’s the message, as Jesus’ followers,
that we are to proclaim and, in doing so,
to expect rejection:                       
to be cut down, like tall poppies.

Tall poppies: we come back, full circle.                                 
Who are the prophets in our midst, I wonder?                                                                  
I suspect that Prophets come in many shapes and sizes and ages.
Do we listen to the message?                               
And does the message offend us – infuriate us? 
When we reject certain people, does that rejection – 
that exclusion from the community of God’s people –
become our version of not honouring folk 
as potential prophets in our midst?                                                                       
Do we ring-fence God’s love to keep God for ourselves,                                                         
to keep God in, and everyone who we don’t like out?  
And if we do so, do we end up closing ourselves off from
new thoughts, ideas, ways of doing things
which might open us, and the community we are a part of,
to new and exciting possibilities?

Tall poppies.
Poppies are usually associated with Remembrance Sunday.
Maybe though, poppies in the context of our bible text this morning 
provide us with another kind of remembering:                              
poppies seem to ‘pop’ up all over the place –
whether in golden barley fields,                         
or in the cracks in the pavements. 
Perhaps, when we wander past a patch of poppies,
they might also serve to remind us to honour
the prophets who are in our midst, not to cut them down,
and a reminder to keep ourselves open to the scandal of God’s big love –
which no amount of ring-fencing can contain.  Amen



[1] Bill Loader - http://wwwstaff.murdoch.edu.au/~loader/MkPentecost5.htm

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