O
God, the light of the minds that know you,
Joy of the hearts that love you,
And strength of the wills that serve you,
Help us so to know you
That we may truly love you,
And so to love you
That we may fully serve you,
Whom to serve is perfect freedom.
Amen.
Im sure many of you were here in the sanctuary on
Monday evening to take part in the forum led by church historian
and Presbyterian pastor Bruce Rigdon. The forum was entitled
The Da Vinci CodeDecoded. Carol
Allen has mentioned already that if you have read the book
and missed Mondays event, then there are audio tapes
available of Bruce Rigdons excellent analysis of this
hugely popular book.
It was quite amazingthere were 1,100 people in the
sanctuary on Monday evening. It seems that you just put
up a sign on Michigan Avenue that says The Da Vinci
CodeDecoded and 1,100 people stream through
the doors of the church. Extraordinary.
I even considered during the week that I might change my
sermon title for todaycall it The Da Vinci
Codeand the Wedding at Cana, or something
like that, just to see if we could get a few more people
through the doors. (Maybe youll find out in the next
few weeks that the Da Vinci Code keeps
coming up in sermon titles!)
It was a very interesting eveningnot only because
of Rigdons excellent analysis, but because, as one
of my colleagues on staff said, this fine historian and
Presbyterian pastor also managed to get a little sermon
in his presentation. He was asked a question at one point,
and in response he offered this little formula, which I
offer to us today to reflect on as we begin to look at this
text from John.
Bruce Rigdon said, in response to a question, The
opposite of faith is not doubt; the opposite of faith is
certainty.
He was challenging a view that he said was prevalent while
he was being educated for ministry thirty or forty years
ago, a view that looks at faith and the religious life through
the same lens that we have in the scientific worldview:
the rational viewpoint that seeks explanations, proofs,
rationality. Rigdon spoke about how in his own ministry,
as he has gotten older, that rational, scientific worldview
has had less of a part in his faith life. The language of
faith for him has become much more the language of aesthetic,
of beauty, we might say of metaphor or poetry.
So he was offering the suggestion that when we gather in
a place like this to hear Gods word and to reflect
on it together, were not bringing that scientific
worldview with us, the one that we probably live with most
of the week.
Now, to be clear, this is not an anti-intellectual stance.
Its not that we somehow check our brains with our
coats at the church door or that when we come here we enter
some vacuum of forgetfulness or that we pretend to live
in a prescientific age. Its more that the questions
that we ask of the text, of the tradition, of ourselves
are different from those that are asked in the science laboratory.
Were not interested so much in how did something happen
as why.
This may be particularly relevant on a morning such as this
with this story that we are reflecting on, the story of
the miracle of the changing of water into wine at the wedding
feast in Cana. A very fine New Testament scholar called
Gail ODay has written some commentary on this passage.
She acknowledges that the modern reader or hearer may find
the miracle puzzling at best and offensive at worst.
She goes on to say that the essence of any miracle is that
it shatters conventional expectations and explanations.
And then she lays out this challenge to we who would read
the text: The task is to struggle with what this miracle
says about Jesus, to struggle with the meaning of
the changing of water into wine and what it tells us about
Jesus.
Lets attempt to clear up a couple of things as we
look at the text, at the story itself. One would be to say
that the miracle at Cana is not primarily about weddings
or about marriage. Now there is certainly a tradition in
the church, a metaphor thats used in some parts of
the churchparticularly in the Roman Catholic traditionthat
would use this story and talk about marriage as being an
image of the relationship between Christ and the church.
The church is sometimes called the bridegroom of Christ
and Christ the groom. Thats maybe something for another
day and another sermon, but its certainly in the tradition.
You heard it in the Old Testament reading that the church
puts together with the Cana reading, that reading from Isaiah
about Gods relationship with Gods people being
described in terms of marriage.
I often use the wedding at Cana at the beginning of a wedding
ceremony. Id say something like this: Jesus
Christ was a guest at the wedding in Cana in Galilee and
Jesus Christ is a guest here at this wedding through his
Spirit, to enrich our love and our joy. It is a way
of recognizing the presence of Christ in the gathered community.
But for this morning and our purposes, the wedding piece
of this really is almost incidental. Its the context,
its the setting in which the banquet is taking place
where Jesus will provide the wine.
So its not about marriage. And then the second thing
I would say is, its not primarily about drinking either.
Im sorry to disappoint you all. You know the old line,
Oh well, you know I can, its fine to drink.
Jesus did it, didnt he? Jesus changed the water into
wineas if this were some kind of daily occurrence
that Jesus performed, a scenario something like Peter coming
back from the supermarket and forgetting the wine for dinner.
Jesus says, Dont worry, just bring me some water
and Ill change it and well be fine. Thats
not what were about today.
That approach does, however, remind me of a dinner I was
at once at a rugby club in Scotland. Rugby players are notorious
for their drinking, so when the chaplain to the rugby team
was asked to say grace, this was the grace that he delivered
at the start of the dinner:
Jesus
save your Lord divine,
who changed the water into wine,
look upon these noble men,
who are going to change it back again.
A little
irreverent, I know. (Dont tell John Buchanan that
I said that from the pulpit of Fourth Church.)
So the miracle at Cana is not about weddings and its
not about drinking. Its about epiphany. The church
has always read this story in the season just after Christmas
around the Festival of Epiphany. The church has understood
epiphany as being a threefold piece that lifts up three
stories from the New Testament. Epiphany means appearance,
a revelation. Its about the recognition of God in
Christ, about the wise men coming to Bethlehem and recognizing
the Messiah. We read that two weeks ago. The baptism of
the Lord was the text for last week. And then the third
is this text, the miracle at Cana. For John, its the
first sign that proves the indwelling of God
in Christ; the result of the miracle is that the disciples
believe that Jesus is the promised Messiah.
The text itself is puzzling. We might find it difficult
here to think about how Jesus treats his mother. Its
interesting to note that in Johns Gospel, the mother
of Jesus is never named, is always just referred to as the
mother of Jesus. Jesus has this almost harsh disengagement
from his mother when she says that the wine has run out.
One of the members at the earlier service came up to me
and said, Youve got to realize that his mother
was a strong Jewish mother and she knew that even though
Jesus disagreed, he would still do as she asked. But
there is paradox here in that Jesus initially seems to say
no but then goes on to fulfill the request by providing
wine miraculously.
Theres a great sermon by Martin Luther King Jr., whose
life and ministry we celebrate this weekend. In the sermon,
he talks about God having a tough mind and a tender hearttheres
an excerpt on the front of the bulletin this morning. [I
am thankful that we worship a God who is both toughminded
and tenderhearted. If God were only toughminded, he would
be a cold, passionless despot sitting in some far-off heaven
contemplating all as Tennyson puts it. . . .
But if God were only tenderhearted, he would be too soft
and sentimental to function when things go wrong and incapable
of controlling what he has made. . . . God is toughminded
enough to transcend the world; he is tenderhearted enough
to live in it. He does not leave us alone in our agonies
and struggles. He seeks us in dark places and suffers with
us and for us in our tragic prodigality.]
King talks about God being toughminded enough to transcend
the world and yet tenderhearted enough to live in it. That
could be something of a commentary on the miracle at Cana.
The transcendent aspect warns us not to domesticate Jesus
or sentimentalize Jesus. Then theres this reversal
in the text, a reversal in the central figure, Jesus, who
has been invited, along with his disciples, to the wedding.
Jesus comes as a guest but then takes on the role of the
host, of the provider, the one who has the best wine, the
wine thats kept until the end and shared; Jesus moves
from the role of guest to host.
I wonder how you would respond if I asked you this morning
to brainstorm what your image of heaven might be. When you
think about the promise of eternity, of eternal life in
Christhow do you picture that?
We might start off with pearly gates and St. Peterthe
New Yorker cartoon view of heaven: haloes and harps
and things like that. And then perhaps wed go deeper
and reflect about some of the scriptural images, some of
the ways in which the Bible talks about Gods promise:
a beautiful city perhaps; restoration of something broken;
or a lush garden, a return to Eden, a theme used so often
by the Scottish poet Edwin Muir in his poetry; or a place
of peace, like the well-known paintings of The Peaceable
Kingdom, where the once-violent animals are now lying
together in harmony.
I wonder if anyone would offer a dinner table or a great
banquet as an image of heaven. This is actually one of the
most frequent images that Jesus uses when he talks about
the reign of God which is ushered in by Jesus Christ and
yet is also the promise of that which is to come. It is
like the story he tells in Luke of the banquet thats
thrown but none of the invited guests want to come. Theyre
all too busy, and so the doors are thrown open and those
who least expect itthe outcasts, those on the marginsare
welcomed in to share the bounty that Jesus offers (John
14). And its not only in the stories that Jesus tells;
its also in Jesus earthly ministry and life.
A friend of mine once said in a sermon that in the Gospels,
Jesus eats more than he prays. Like when he sees Zaccheus
and says, Im coming to your house for dinner.
And so Jesus embodies and lives out this central image of
the reign of God. It repeats itself in the miraculous feeding
of the 5,000 and the 4,000, a vision of inclusion and bounty.
This first act, this first sign, the presence of Jesus at
a banquet in which Jesus is the host who provides the wine,
points us towards that vision: a vision of wholeness and
fullness and justice for the world and for Gods people.
It seems to be saying that when were out, when weve
got nothing left, when were out of hope, when were
out of peace, when weve got no love left, that Jesus,
the host, comes bringing those things in fullness to us.
And that sense of excess is not just by chance here. William
Barclay, the well-known Scottish professor of New Testament,
in his commentary says, No wedding party on earth
could drink 180 gallons of wine. No need on earth can exhaust
the grace of Christ. That sense of fullness, of excess,
is important.
Ive been reading an American poet quite a bit recently,
Richard Wilbur. I only came across him recently, but I understand
he is quite well-known. He was, I believe, Poet Laureate
of the United States in the late 80s. He wrote a lovely
poem on this theme called A Wedding Toast.
So
John tells how, at Canas wedding feast,
The water-pots poured wine in such amount
That by his sober count
There were a hundred gallons at the least.
It made no earthly sense, unless to show
How whatsoever love elects to bless
Brims to a sweet excess
That can without depletion overflow.
A sweet
excessthats what is brought by Jesus to Cana.
And every time we come across something like this in the
New Testamenta story of feeding, of Christs
presence at a tableit should always take us to the
time that we come together with Christ around the table
in the sharing of communion, when we come to this table
placed centrally at the front of the church.
One of the things I love about Fourth Presbyterian Church
is that even when were not actually sharing bread
and wine together on Sunday morning, we have the table there
and we have the symbols of communion to remind us that even
though we wont actually take bread and wine, our worship
is done in the context of our being fed, of our coming into
community around the table. It points forward to that time
when we will meet Christ in bread and in cup. It points
forward to the promise of the great banquet of eternal life,
to a sense of Jesus being the host, the one who cares for
us.
Theres a great story that Martin Luther King Jr. tells
in another of his sermons. He talks about the Montgomery
bus protest in Montgomery, Alabama, and tells of one of
the people who was there in the movement with him, an old
African American woman, Mother Pollard they called her.
King says that,
Although
she was poverty-stricken and uneducated, she was amazingly
intelligent and possessed a deep understanding of the meaning
of the movement. After having walked for several weeks,
she was asked if she were tiredwith ungrammatical
profundity, she answered, My feets is tired but my
soul is rested.
And
King goes on to tell how he was speaking at one of the mass
rallied later on a Monday evening. He says,
I
attempted to convey an overt impression of strength and
courage although I was moderately depressed and fear stricken.
At the end of the meeting Mother Pollard came to the front
of the church and said, Come here, son. I immediately
went to her and hugged her affectionately. Somethings
wrong with you, she said, you didnt talk
strong tonight.
King
says he sought further to disguise his fears. He said,
No,
no, Mother Pollard, nothings wrong, Im feeling
as fine as ever.
You cant fool me, she said, I
know somethings wrong. Is it that we aint
doing the things to please you or is it that the white
folks is bothering you?
Before I could respond she looked directly into my eyes
and said, I done told you we was with you all the
way. And then her face became radiant and she said
in words of quiet certainty, but even if we aint
with you, Gods gonna take care of you.
Thats
what the miracle of the wedding of Cana means. It means
Gods gonna take care of you and me. It
means that Gods promise to the least and the last,
to the lost and the lonely, and the depleted and those whove
run out of steam, is that there is fullness. Its said
so beautifully in a prayer that I love very much. Its
a communion prayer written by a Mexican woman called Elsa
Tamez.
Come
on, lets celebrate the supper of the Lord,
Lets make a huge loaf of bread
And let us bring abundant wine
Like at the wedding at Cana.
Let the woman not forget the salt,
Let the men bring along the yeast,
Let many guests comethe lame, the blind, the crippled,
the poor
Come quickly,
Let us follow the recipe of the Lord.
All of us let us knead the dough together with our hands
And let us see with joy how the bread grows
Because today we celebrate the meeting with the Lord.
Today we renew our commitment to the kingdom.
Nobody will stay hungry,
Nobody will be thirsty.
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