Fortune
cookies are not what they used to be. Have you noticed?
The quality of the cookie hasnt changed much, but
the little piece of paper on the inside has been rendered
useless by a new generation of fortune writers
or whatever theyre called. You break apart the cookie
and eagerly pick up the slender slip of paper only to read
Each day contains a ray of sunshine or People
who live in glass houses should draw the drapesproverbs
or aphorisms, sound advice or a quick smile, but nothing
to cause you to look forward to tomorrow. What ever happened
to the enticing An important travel opportunity is
coming your way or the cryptic Dont be
too quick to say yes tomorrow? Didnt we used
to feel a sense of kismetthat somehow it was our fate
to open that particular cookie, the one pointing in our
direction? And then wed speculate about when or how
that enigmatic prediction might come to pass.
No, fortune cookies are not what they used to be, and without
them, how are we to get our clues about lifes next
chapter? About where we are going? Maybe thats why
life is such a puzzle.
Well, we cant blame our psychic restlessness on the
deteriorated state of fortune cookies. Still the desire
to get a handle on our futureon our own big
pictureis a challenging and continuing process
for each of us. It sometimes gets phrased in grand and epic
language that speculates on the underlying purpose of our
existence, but more regularly, it is a subtle question that
nibbles at the corners of our minds in off moments when
we catch ourselves thinkingaskingWhat
is life supposed to be about? The recurring and haunting
nature of that question pushes us to find some sort of answer.
And since fortune cookies have proven to be of little help,
we scurry about looking for something else.
One extremely popular approach is a trip to Borders. You
see it all the timepeople wandering around a display
table, picking up a book, reading the comments on the dust
jacket or skimming through the table of contents. Then theyll
put it down and pick up another. This is not the fiction
table. No one here is looking for a good read
on their next plane trip. The constant hope is that some
phrase will strike a chord, will suggest that these pages
might just contain that clear and unambiguous word about
life, about your life, my life. The hope that springs eternal
is that we will catch a sense, an image, a picture of our
true selves, that we will find a solution to our dilemma
of what life is supposed to be about.
The underlying assumption here is that we are intelligent,
thoughtful adults and thus are perfectly capable of discovering
or devising our own answers to these purpose of life
questions, given the right resources.
I dont want to question that. I dont want to
underestimate or malign our abilities and insights. But
there is the matter of where we look for answers. I feel
obligated to make a comment on that subjectand then
to tell you a story. My comment isand I know youll
all be surprised to hear me say itthat the Bible has
a lot to say about our lifes purpose, a lot to say
on the subject of what life is supposed to be about. So
perhaps we should spend more time with the Bible and less
time wandering around in Borders! Now, I know thats
a word you expect to hear from a pulpit. Its the kind
of line you only half hear, sort of like And now a
word from our sponsors. But today there is a story
that goes with my word of biblical encouragement.
I was in a conversation recently with a couple of church
members, deeply involved people who are around here a lot.
I cant remember the exact subject of the conversation,
but at some point, one of them said, Well, you know
what they say: The Lord helps those who help themselves.
My officious nature got the best of me and I replied, Most
people who say that think it is a quote from the Bible,
but it isnt. It isnt? I always thought
it was. Well, I said offhandedly, we
probably need to get you all into some Bible study so you
can learn what it says and what it doesnt.
There was no quick retort, no reply of any kind, just exchanged
glances. Suddenly the mood in the room shifted. It was as
if I had suggested walking barefoot through burning coals.
Whats the matter? I asked. It took a little
whilethere was a lot of hemming and hawingbut
when we finally got to the reason for their reaction, it
went something like this: It was their assumption that if
they started to do serious Bible study, they would soon
become just like those people whom they could not abidepeople
who have a biblical quote for every circumstance, who are
fanatically self-assured, and who treat any challenge to
their pronouncements as clear evidence of heathen leanings!
What a strange reality. Regular churchgoing folk who had
been scared away from the Bible by those whose use of it
had turned them off, had disgusted them. Regular churchgoing
folks whose approach to those haunting questions about the
purpose of life was to wander around the tables in Borders
and to ask their friends and acquaintances what they were
reading, because the Bible had become off-limits for them.
Trust me on this: our reason for promoting regular study
of the Bible is not to turn you all into overzealous, verse-quoting
marketers of faith formulas. Rather, it is to provide us
with insight into who we are meant to be, to provide insights
to help us deal with lifes perplexing questions.
Take, for example, the passage we read from Luke a few minutes
ago. Jesus, returning to his hometown of Nazareth, goes
into the synagogue, and as a visitor, he is given the opportunity
to read the scripture for the day. So he reads a passage
from the book of Isaiah that says, The Spirit of the
Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good
news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to
the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let
the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lords
favor. Then he tells those who are gathered there
that this passagethis word of prophecyis beginning
to be accomplished right then and there. It is a moment
of dramatic significance, for as Fred Craddock explains,
The event announces who Jesus is, of what his ministry
consists, and what his church will be and do
(Luke, p. 61). Those who were present in that synagogue
got a glimpse of what God was all about and what they too
would be about if they followed this Jesus. Here were words
of purpose. What Jesus read spoke to the questions of that
dayand this.
So years later, we can hear these same words speaking to
our questions about lifes purpose. After hours of
searching through advice columns and best seller lists,
after endless cocktail party conversations and journeys
up and down the information highway, we find ourselves drawn
back to what for many of us are our roots, back to the Bible
that we had left behind or had surrendered to the surgical
slicing of the fundamentalists. And we discover that it
holds some clear answers to our most perplexing questions.
What life is supposed to be about is bringing good news
to the poor and release to the captives. Really? But what
if that is not my thing? What if I dont have a lot
of contact with the poor and the oppressed and the captives?
Oh, but you do! You meet them around the tables in Borders.
You hear their questions in the water cooler conversations
at work. You see them on the bus pouring over the Dear
Abby column. And you discover them sitting in the
pew beside you on Sunday morning. In their faces, in their
attitude, in their words, are the questionsquestions
of how and when and why, questions of purpose. They are
the ones held captive, the ones who are desperate for some
good news.
And lets not get too self-assured here. This is not
a time to talk about us and them. We are all part of the
questioning multitude. My journeyour journeysgo
on. Our questions are always in the process of finding
answers. What we have to offer is not resolution, but a
resource, a path toward purpose, an idea, an insight, an
image, to work from, to build on.
For Paul that image was a body, a body composed necessarily
of many different parts: eyes and ears, fingers and toes,
bones and organs. Our purpose, he said, isnt to turn
everyone into two ears. That would be contributing to the
very oppression we are charged to overcome! Nor is it to
praise some parts to the detriment and devaluing of others.
Indeed each part of the body has its unique purpose, and
by its uniqueness, it makes its contributions to the functioning
of the whole. And as that whole body functions together,
we each discover our importance, our purpose.
So what is my purpose? What is life supposed to be about?
It is not enough to be able to say that life is good and
that we are surrounded bypart ofa nice group
of people. The answer to these questions needs to be something
that we can understand, write down, work from. It needs
to be something we can grab hold of, hang on to. That kind
of an answer will not show up in a self-help book or a chat
room or pop out of a fortune cookie. Most of these sources
cant and wont tell you what those folks in Nazareth
heard. They wont tell you what we heard today. That
the Spirit of the Lord is upon us, that we have
been appointed and anointed to a particular task: to bring
good news to the poor and oppressed, to set the captives
free. Some might refer to it as an assignment, a challenge,
but I think it is also appropriate to refer to it as our
particular purpose, our answer to that lingering, inescapable,
haunting question: What is life supposed to be about?
It is about understanding that we are not orphans adrift
in a hostile world. Its about being able to share
with others the good news that we are all part of the body,
that we are loved and valued. It is about demonstrating
that there is a place at Gods family table for everyone,
that beyond doubt and struggle and pain and fear and oppression,
there is hopeand in that hope we find our purpose,
we discover the way we are all intended to live. We know
this becausethe Bible tells us so.
Amen.