Saturday, January 31, 2015

I return...after a couple of months hiatus - A Sermon for Feb 1 - 1 Corinthians 8:1-13



Sacred Cows
4th after Epiphany  Year B     February 1 /2015
I don’t know about you but when I read the bible there is some of it that I understand and some that I do not.  Some stories are really clear like the story of Noah’s arc – a man a boat and a bunch of animals, concluding with a rainbow promise of God’s to never flood the earth again; pretty simple – another example - the birth of Jesus – Mary and Joseph a couple of angels a baby being born in a stable – shepherds visit and God gets into the world in a new way through this simple life moment.  All in all pretty straight forward – Some Bible stories are more complex, however,  especially if Jesus is the one they are about like the miracles about the feeding of the 5000, or walking on water, or calming the storm or turning water into wine – stories that you need to really think about.  And when the stories are told by Jesus  often our minds get twisted up in knots trying to figure them out – you have to last to be first,  a little child shall lead them, you need to be in the world but not of the world - blessed are the poor in spirit, and those who morn, and the meek. 
Yet truthfully for me – I have learned to wrestle with Jesus over the years, who really confuses me though, and makes me feel like I don’t know anything at all – is Paul – Paul letters to the churches – we call them the epistles.  There is something about Paul who uses words such as ‘sanctification’ and ‘justification’ and ‘righteousness’ that makes me squeamish.  It is intimidating preaching on a passage when I don’t really understand what he is getting at.  The other thing about Paul is that he is speaking into the reality of his day and to a culture that is very very different from our culture today.  Paul is also the one who speaks against homosexuals, and divorce and has issues with woman especially in leadership positions in the church.  You may have noticed by now that these lessons are rarely the focus of the sermon, yet today when the Sunday School Curriculum indicated that they were going to focus on the 1 Corinthians reading I thought I should at least try to tackle it.   
So the first thing I do when I come across a passage that causes confusion instead of understanding is to read in another interpretation. The Bible has been translated and translated again and again since it was first written, and translations of translations.  My favorite Bible translation for reading Paul is The Message – which is written by Eugene Peterson who is an American pastor, scholar, writer and poet.  He rewrote the Bible to make it more accessible to modern people; this is what Peterson says about why he rewrote the bible:
When Paul of Tarsus wrote a letter, the people who received it understood it instantly, When the prophet Isaiah preached a sermon, I can't imagine that people went to the library to figure it out. That was the basic premise under which I worked. I began with the New Testament in the Greek…(and)  I just typed out a page the way I thought it would have sounded to the Galatians.[1]
I feel like I am in good company when I learned that Peterson wrote the message because of Paul’s epistals…. So here is Eugene Peterson’s rewrite of the passage from 1st  Corinthians that Steve read a few minutes ago:
1 Corinthians 8:1-13
1-3 The question keeps coming up regarding meat that has been offered up to an idol: Should you attend meals where such meat is served, or not? We sometimes tend to think we know all we need to know to answer these kinds of questions—but sometimes our humble hearts can help us more than our proud minds. We never really know enough until we recognize that God alone knows it all.
4-6 Some people say, quite rightly, that idols have no actual existence, that there’s nothing to them, that there is no God other than our one God, that no matter how many of these so-called gods are named and worshiped they still don’t add up to anything but a tall story. They say—again, quite rightly—that there is only one God the Father, that everything comes from him, and that he wants us to live for him. Also, they say that there is only one Master—Jesus the Messiah—and that everything is for his sake, including us. Yes. It’s true.
In strict logic, then, nothing happened to the meat when it was offered up to an idol. It’s just like any other meat. I know that, and you know that. But knowing isn’t everything. If it becomes everything, some people end up as know-it-alls who treat others as know-nothings. Real knowledge isn’t that insensitive.
We need to be sensitive to the fact that we’re not all at the same level of understanding in this. Some of you have spent your entire lives eating “idol meat,” and are sure that there’s something bad in the meat that then becomes something bad inside of you. An imagination and conscience shaped under those conditions isn’t going to change overnight.
8-9 But fortunately God doesn’t grade us on our diet. We’re neither commended when we clean our plate nor reprimanded when we just can’t stomach it. But God does care when you use your freedom carelessly in a way that leads a fellow believer still vulnerable to those old associations to be thrown off track.
What do you think? – was that easier to understand? – Did that make more sense?  Paul is talking to the church about what type of food is brought to the churches potlucks – but it is much more than that.  In Corinth, a large city, meat was rare and animals were used to sacrifice to the Roman gods – like Venus and Apollo and Jupiter.  Mary W. Anderson gives us a bit of a history lesson:  “Our ancestors in the faith struggled with a different dilemma. The faith of first-century Christians in the Roman Empire was rooted in Christ, but their living was grounded in Caesar. In cities like Corinth the common marketplace sold meat for a family's evening meal just as markets do today. But in Corinth, the butcher was a priest in service to some Greek or Roman deity. All butchering had religious significance -- and the significance was not Christian. Early Christians had different theological views on what was ethical or permissible. Some thought it an insult to Christ to even purchase or consume meat roasted to tickle the nostrils of Jupiter. Others said since Christians didn't believe in Jupiter, the meat wasn't sacrificial, just nutritional. We can only imagine what first-century potluck dinners were like. Did they have meat-consuming" and "meat-refraining" tables? (Absolutely) Did they consider one another's faith to be faulty? You bet!”[2] This squabble between the meat eaters and the non-meat eaters had reached such a pitch that word had gotten out the wider church and Paul’s letter to the church members in Corinth is an attempt to stop the conflict.  Paul is attempting to mediate a dispute from a distance with is letter.  So instead of taking sides and say ‘this is right and this is wrong’ he calls the conflict into question not the issue – that is to say – Paul responds by addressing the relationship that the people in Corinth have with each other within the church and also their relationship with God through Jesus the Christ.  He is telling the congregation at Corinth that their conflict is not about the meat – or who eats the meat or why they eat the meat – that is just the surface issue and not really what matters – God does not care about what we eat Paul says, God cares about how we treat our neighbours both inside and outside the church.  Paul takes the attention off of the subject of eating meat offered to idols.  It is, Paul says, about the loving way you treat each other regardless of whether you have the same opinion about a church policy or not.  And remember – this ‘chapter’ in the epistle of 1 Corinthians is not a chapter at all – the chapter and verses where written into the bible decades after the letter was written so it is a continuous writing from chapter 1 to chapter 16 where the lovely chapter that is read at weddings is found – Love is patient and kind and not envious and never boasts – is is not rude or boastful and never ends – love writes Paul is what it is all about….
Isn’t it wonderful that we have come so far from those first century churches that we no longer have fights about which meat to eat at a potluck, or what colour the church carpet should be, how many meetings to hold a year or if the church should marry same sex couples or what hymn book to use in a worship service.  No, thanks to Paul letter to the Corinthians we don’t have conflict in church any more…..well maybe just a bit – actually quite a lot – for some reason we in the church choose being right over being loving more often than not – quite contrary from Paul’s message.
I have been serving the church for 16 years and so far I have yet to be in a church that did not have conflict or some sort or other – some inconsequential and some quite significant.  In fact the longer I serve and the shifting culture of our churches where anxiety is raising as our number decline both in the pews and in the collection plates and our heads become increasingly grey and our younger families find other things to do on Sunday morning – the more conflict is prevalent. And when our conflict is high often our decision are based in our heads instead of in our hearts which is the place that Paul is calling us to respond from this morning.  For when we respond with our heads and make the ‘right’ decision, our loving hearts may get broken.
Over the years I have witnessed churches making the ‘right decisions’ and unintentionally being unloving to its members.  For instance when I was a young mother of boys and just starting to attend a new church after moving into a new community, there was already a family in attendance whose children were a little out of control – well alright,  a lot out control and some of the older generation where beginning to complain about how disruptive they were in worship – so the minister and a member of the session were appointed to go and have a chat with the family so that the children would behave ‘better’ in church.  The right thing – maybe – loving – not so much – so that family I imagined felt shamed and they moved up the hill to the Anglican church and the United Church never saw them again.  In another church I served the church secretary who was paid 10 hours a month and worked at least 10 hours a week, was sent a letter that asked her to improve her editing skills because the bulletin had a couple of typo’s in it each week – right response maybe – loving response – not at all – that secretary moved her lifetime membership to an United Church in the next community and no longer supports the church of her childhood.  Another time glitter was banned from the church because it was too hard for the custodian to clean up and people were getting glitter on their hands when they would have coffee after worship on the same tables the children used not at all a loving response to all the glitter artists in the church….you probably by now have a couple of instances in your minds too when you have witnessed the church do the right thing but not necessarily the loving thing.
Which I think is the biggest reason why Paul letter to the Corinthians should really be called Paul’s letter to St. James or even Paul’s letter the United Church of Canada –or should I say “Paul’s letter to the Church of Christ in the world” Because it not about the meat – it’s about the relationships – it’s about the people of God and how they relate to God and to each other.  It is about how the people are caring and sharing and loving their neighbour who is in this example  someone who refuses to eat meat sacrificed to idols cause they are afraid it will hurt their relationship with God – don’t eat the meat says Paul it is better to love your neighbour and go vegetarian than to remain a carnivore and alienate yourself from your church.  Think from your hearts people – was Paul’s big message – for the greatest of these – remember 5 chapters later – the greatest of these is LOVE….everything else is a banging gong and a clanging cymbal.


"Eugene Peterson: The Story Behind The Message". Lifeway. Retrieved 2008-03-28
[2] Mary W. Anderson:  Sins and Sensibilities - http://www.religion-online.org/showarticle.asp?title=1902