Preached at Holy Trinity, Charlotte on May 29, 2016.
LUKE
7:1-10
After
Jesus had finished all his sayings in the hearing of the people, he entered
Capernaum. 2A centurion there had a slave whom he valued
highly, and who was ill and close to death. 3When he heard
about Jesus, he sent some Jewish elders to him, asking him to come and heal his
slave. 4When they came to Jesus, they appealed to him
earnestly, saying, “He is worthy of having you do this for him, 5for
he loves our people, and it is he who built our synagogue for us.” 6And
Jesus went with them, but when he was not far from the house, the centurion
sent friends to say to him, “Lord, do not trouble yourself, for I am not worthy
to have you come under my roof; 7therefore I did not presume to
come to you. But only speak the word, and let my servant be healed. 8For
I also am a man set under authority, with soldiers under me; and I say to one,
‘Go,’ and he goes, and to another, ‘Come,’ and he comes, and to my slave, ‘Do
this,’ and the slave does it.” 9When Jesus heard this he was
amazed at him, and turning to the crowd that followed him, he said, “I tell
you, not even in Israel have I found such faith.” 10When those
who had been sent returned to the house, they found the slave in good health.
When
did it happen? Jesus enters the town of Capernaum. There is a centurion there—a
big-deal Roman soldier. And the centurion has a slave, who apparently means a
lot to him, and the slave was near death. When the centurion hears that Jesus
is there, he sends some of the Jewish elders to Jesus to see if he’ll come and
heal his slave. So, they find Jesus and plead their case, telling Jesus that
the centurion is a good man and he deserves this favor.
So,
Jesus goes with them, but while they’re on their way, some of the centurion’s
friends come to Jesus with a message. Despite the fact that the Jewish elders
deem the centurion worthy of Jesus’ help, the centurion himself doesn’t. He
doesn’t want Jesus to risk defiling himself by entering the home of a gentile.
But if Jesus only speaks the word, he knows that his servant will be healed. Jesus
is amazed at the centurion’s faith. And then, those who had been sent to speak
with Jesus return to the centurion’s house and find the slave has been healed.
So,
when did it happen? Jesus didn’t lay hands on the slave. He didn’t lay eyes on
him. He didn’t even lay a word on him. And the slave was healed. When?
Sometime
when Jesus was in the middle of the road.
Luke’s
gospel is filled with acts of compassion that take place in the middle of the
road. Right after this story, we read about Jesus in a town called Nain, and
the body of a widow’s son is being carried in the street on a funeral bier. At
the word of Jesus, the dead man was alive… right there in the middle of the
road. Later, Jesus heals a hemorrhaging woman in the middle of the road. The
same for a demon possessed man—the one where the demons ended up inside the
pigs on the hillside.
Luke
is the only gospel that includes Jesus’ parable about a man who has been beaten
and left for dead when a Samaritan stops to help him, in the middle of the
road. Luke is also the only gospel writer who gives us the parable of a young
man who breaks his father’s heart by taking his inheritance and getting as far
away from his father as possible. After he blows all his father’s money, this
son decides he has no choice but to return home and beg for forgiveness. He
goes over his groveling speech again and again as he makes the long journey
home again, “Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you; I am no
longer worthy to be called your son; treat me like one of your hired hands.”
Before
the son has a chance to get the words out of his mouth, his father sees him
from a distance and runs to his son, throws his arms around him and kisses him.
Right there in the middle of the road.
It
seems that the middle of the road is a symbol for grace, doesn’t it? The father
in the story of the prodigal son doesn’t wait for his son to come to him. He
doesn’t care if the son meets the right criteria before he welcomes him home.
He doesn’t mind the fact that the son doesn’t deserve to be forgiven for the
way he turned his back on his family. Before conditions are met, love is
extended. That’s grace. Undeserved. Unconditional. Unexpected. And it happens
right there in the middle of the road.
Now,
you may think of the “middle of the road” as a political phrase, and although
that’s not how I’m using it here, it’s actually not unrelated. Our nation is so
polarized right now that it seems no one is standing in the middle of the road.
We don’t want to have a thing to do with people who disagree with us, unless
it’s to hurl insults and demonize them. The primary election has been a battle of
extremes, indicative of our larger culture.
If
there’s one thing I’ve become convinced of in the decades I’ve served as a
pastor, it’s that there is something more important than being right, and God
knows, I like to be right. But it’s more important to be loving than it is to
be right. More important than planting my flag in the ground and taking a firm stand,
is an ability to move to the middle of the road for a conversation. That’s what
it means to be a person of grace. I may not always do that well, but I know
it’s where following Jesus takes me. It takes me smack dab to the middle of the
road.
That’s
where one of the highlights of my time at Holy Trinity took me. It was a
glorious day. I felt a lot like I imagine King David might have felt when he
danced naked in the middle of the street bringing the Ark of the Covenant into
Jerusalem. Only it wasn’t Jerusalem, I wasn’t dancing… and I certainly wasn’t
naked. We can all be thankful for that! I was riding on the back of a black Volkswagen
convertible waving a rainbow flag at 100,000 people lining Tryon Street.
What
I wore that day raised a bit of controversy. I have colleagues who strongly
objected to the fact that I wore my white alb and rainbow stole, as if I were
dressed for worship… well, worship in a church where the rainbow stole would be
appreciated.
It was
2014, the year I was one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit that brought marriage
equality to North Carolina, and I had been named Outstanding Ally by Charlotte
Pride, so I got to ride up front like a celebrity. I debated what to wear that
day. When I asked my fashion consultant, Linda Davis, she said I should robe
up, and she was right.
For those
who have been damaged by the hatred and scorn of the Church, my presence spoke
volumes. I was a symbol of reconciliation for folks who had been pushed to the
margins because of their sexual orientation or gender identity. When they saw
me smiling and waving, dressed in the official clothing of a holy person, the
Church had come to them right there on the buckle of the Bible belt—at the
intersection of Trade and Tryon. They saw that there are Christians who aren’t
asking them to change who they are before we approve of them. There are
Christians who don’t just tolerate them as deviants. Never before had they seen
a church person riding in a lead car like that at a Pride Parade. I knew that
what I was doing was significant for the LGBTQ community. I represented the
Christian church, and I was celebrating them as people created in the image of
God. I was grace in the middle of the road.
This
week on Facebook I saw the statement, “Don’t cross oceans for people who
wouldn’t step over a puddle for you.” It makes a lot of sense. Don’t give
yourself to someone who isn’t willing to give anything to you. Why would you?
That wouldn’t make any sense. And yet, that’s not the way grace works, is it?
Grace is kind with the unkind. Patient with the rude. Loving with the judgmental
and hateful. Grace DOES cross oceans for people who wouldn’t step over a puddle
for you.
That’s
why Jesus spent so much time in the middle of the road, from the beginning of
his life. when his parents traveled to Bethlehem… to the years of his ministry
when we see him compassionately meeting people where they are… to the end of
his life when he is greeted by a cheering crowd waving palm branches as he rides
into Jerusalem… and then finally, when their cheers become jeers, and he carries
his cross through the streets. It all happened in the middle of the road.
And
that’s why we’re called to the middle of the road as well. Because that’s where
grace is found.
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