The Power of Place
June 20, 2004
Deborah F. Mullen,
Associate Professor and Dean of Masters Programs,
McCormick Theological Seminary
Director of the Center for African American Ministries
and Black Church Studies
Psalm 42
1 Kings 19:1–4, 8–15a
Galatians 3:23–29
"Never
put a period where God has put a comma.”
Gracie Allen
Father’s Day is one of those special
occasions that always fall on a Sunday, like Mother’s
Day, which means churches have to figure out what to do
with it. Unlike Mother’s Day, however, Father’s
Day seems to fly just under the radar in most places. Customs
vary widely. Some congregations plan for the men of the
church to play special and more prominent roles in the
service. Sometimes, if one exists, the men’s chorus
sings especially fatherly hymns. Some congregations only
make mention of it in the bulletin. Others have a long-standing
tradition of putting on special events, like a father-daughter
pancake breakfast or a father-son camping or fishing trip.
Preachers are all over the map on this, too. Some preachers
devote the morning message to the biblical images of fatherhood
that mirror how they see God as a loving parent who is
always ready to welcome the prodigal son or daughter home.
Clearly, it is a message worth hearing almost any Sunday,
any Sunday but this one in this place.
But don’t despair. Rather than totally disappoint
those of you who came thinking you were going to hear some
good news in the spirit of Father’s Day, my brief
message before the message comes from everybody’s
favorite father, The Coz. R..I..G..H..T… So for the
next few minutes, think of Bill Cosby as your guest preacher.
This short meditation is taken from “In from the
Cold,” found in Cosby’s number 1 best seller
entitled Fatherhood (see pp. 157-158).
. . .
And now that Rev. Daddy Dr. Bill has warmed you up, I’m
ready to deliver the message I came to share with you this
morning. It’s also about belonging, loving, and what
it means to be “stuck with each other” in Christ
Jesus.
“
For in Christ Jesus you are all children of God through
faith. . . . There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is
no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female;
for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.”
In our time remaining, would you think with me on the theme “the
power of place”? What does it mean to be in Christ
Jesus all children of God in faith? Let us pray:
Dear God, place your spirit within our hearts that
we might experience your word afresh and as good news for
this new
day. Bless us to praise and glorify you as we strain to
hear your voice beyond our thoughts and turn toward your
truth. Show us the way you would have us to live and serve
you, not only in faith, but in hope for the freedom that
is ours because of the high price paid by your beloved
Son Jesus Christ. For it is in his matchless name we pray.
Amen.
In Christmastimes past, he would have put
his carpenter’s
pay into wine and cognac, heroin and cocaine. And if
he had already spent the money, as he so often had, then
he
would have charmed some sucker into a loan or a free
taste.
Even now, clean and sober for several years, he respects
the temptations of what
he calls “the threefold”—Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s
Eve. And he worries not only about himself. Having been saved, Robert came
to understand the reason why: so that he could help rescue others. They call
themselves
the Wounded Healers, and they meet every Saturday
at Saint Paul. (1)
Robert Sharper
is a member of the “Church Unusual,” a slogan coined by the Reverend
Johnny Ray Youngblood, pastor of Saint Paul Community Baptist Church in Brooklyn,
New York. Youngblood and Saint Paul are the subjects of one of the finest books
about being the church that I have ever read. And I commend it to you. Samuel
G. Freedman’s book Upon This Rock beautifully records a year in the life
of a pastor and his people. Freedman’s writing is graceful and revealing
in a way that invites the reader to participate vicariously in the miraculous
recovery of community through the faithful efforts of a church with a vision
and a dynamic leader whose mission is nothing less than victory for Jesus’ sake.
Once called by a visiting mayor “the beginning and end of our civilization,” the
neighborhood surrounding Saint Paul, the community that has grown up around it,
and the congregation have much success to commend to three things: faith, hope,
and love.
To these three, I will add three more: location, location, location—words
all too familiar to those of us gathered here in this magnificent sanctuary situated
on what is now arguably one of the most expensive parcels of commercial real
estate in the country, if not among the most pricey in the world. By comparison,
imagine Cabrini-Green and its environs one mile west of where you are now seated,
imagine it some forty years ago when Fourth Presbyterian Church seeded its first
outreach programs in that community under the dynamic leadership of its pastor
Elam Davies. In its day it was a bold mission venture, to be sure, into a place
which in many ways epitomized the worst-case scenario in a history of race and
class conflict supported by public policy that upheld segregation of African
Americans into public housing in the city of Chicago.
James K. Wellman’s book The Gold Coast Church and the Ghetto provides a
fascinating analysis of this period in the life of Fourth Church. Jim and I were
doctoral students together at the Divinity School at the University of Chicago
while he was working at the church and completing the research and dissertation
that became the book. Boy, was I jealous! He got done way before I did!
Wellman is candid in his critique of the church’s mission to Cabrini-Green.
Of course he is right in pointing out that while Elam Davies successfully challenged
Fourth Presbyterian Church, then an upper-middle-class congregation, to extend
its boundaries into the places where lower socioeconomic class families of African
American and Hispanic youth lived on the Near North Side, some of whom would
eventually become church members, the culture of social inequity across class
and race would continue to prevail. Economic opportunity zones in and around
the Loop areas of downtown needed space to grow—space, according to Wellman,
that was freed up by segregating poor folks outside of the places where upper-class
markets were being targeted for expansion.
Although Fourth Presbyterian Church would offer no challenge to segregated
public housing at the time, ironically, the church’s prophetic mission to Cabrini-Green
that began in the early 1960s would survive until this present day as a ministry
of transformation and community partnership that has changed both the life of
this church and the lives of many on the Near North Side.
The power of place is faith in that which is unseen and yet to come in
Christ Jesus!
Now imagine Saint Paul Community Baptist Church planted in the middle of
what also was a place that had been all but abandoned, except by the debilitating
forces of poverty, and neglected by city, state, and private economic development
initiatives; where people were regarded as social refuse, treated as disposable,
and crime was so rampant, reports Freedman, that precinct police wore T-shirts
that announced “The Killing Fields.” (2) And imagine those
who lived as though they were imprisoned by their surroundings, by the
seemingly
endless
cycle of devastation as a result of record numbers of murders, rapes, robberies,
and assaults committed where they lived, and who were drug addicts, pimps,
prostitutes, and as kids were caught up in youth gangs. Imagine them sitting
alongside of
sister and brother church members who once feared and despised them because
of what their lives had become and who now embraced them because of who
they were
becoming in the new lives in Christ Jesus!
The power of place is hope in that which is promised and yet to be fully realized
in Christ Jesus!
In Christ Jesus, at least at Saint Paul Community Church, all had become children
of God through faith and had been set free from whatever imprisoned them so
that they might receive what God had promised them through faith in Jesus Christ.
In Christ Jesus, at least at Saint Paul Community Church, there are no distinctions
of class, race, and gender that superceded whose they were as a child of God
through faith in Christ Jesus. This is the scripture lesson and the gospel
truth
found in the third chapter of Paul’s letter to the Galatians. Hear it again:
Paul declares that there is freedom, where? In the power of place. That place
is in Christ Jesus and through him all are children of God.
The power of place is in love that is accepting, welcoming, and freely given
in Christ Jesus!
Perhaps more than any of Paul’s letters, other than Romans, his letter
to the Galatians stands out as a manifesto of freedom for the church of
Jesus Christ to exercise the power of place in new and liberating ways
in the world.
New Testament scholar Cain Hope Felder, author of Troubling Biblical Waters,
says that what we find in Galatians 3:28—“There is no longer
Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male
and female;
for all of you are one in Christ Jesus”—represents a “spiritual
ideal within the church,” that Paul is urging believers and the church
to make it real in the world. (3)
At the heart of our faith as believers is the conviction that in Christ Jesus
we possess the power of place. That place is freedom, a freedom that the world
can’t give or take away. In Christ Jesus, God with us, we are stuck with
each other like the family Bill Cosby described, and we are given the freedom
in spirit and in truth to dismantle any humanly created barriers in church and
society that marginalize, exclude, or dehumanize other children of God in ways
that prohibit them from receiving the full benefits of belonging and becoming
all of who God intends them to be.
Paul’s letter to the Galatians was written for a community that was being
traumatized by teachers who were trying to pass off bad news as good news, which
for Paul was nothing short of perverting the gospel. These teachers were trying
to divide the new believers into separate and unequal categories of Christians.
Paul’s own experience likely made him especially passionate in the situation.
Before his own conversion and coming to faith in Christ Jesus, Paul likely would
have followed those whom he now sought to discredit. But in Christ he was now
a new creation. He was no longer free to persecute believers in Christ in order
to destroy the liberation movement Christ Jesus had begun. Christ’s death
and resurrection had flipped the script of ancient law that required strict separations
among classes of people deemed to be locked into life stations that restricted
their freedoms as Gentiles, slaves, and females.
The power of place is the power in Christ to make all things new!
Little has changed or so it seems. Divisions among the churches and between
Christians over race, ethnicity, class, gender, sexual identity and orientation,
and theological
disagreements of every kind are no less threatening today than were the real
and near disasters of Paul’s day. And yet we have the same opportunity
that Paul and his contemporaries had to use our lives in Christ Jesus to serve
the mission and ministry of inclusion and equality Jesus Christ began while on
this earth.
The power of place is to continue Christ’s ministry of sharing his radically
inclusive kin-dom as we work for justice and freedom for all God’s children!
We can choose this day how we will live in Christ as God’s children through
faith and how we will serve God’s people as bearers of news that is truly
good for all of God’s children. Not only in faith or in some spiritual
ideal of the church, but in the reality of the world where hope for the freedom
that is ours in Christ is to be shared with others because in Christ Jesus the
high price for that freedom for all of God’s children has already been
paid in full!
Thanks be to God!
Amen.
Notes
1. Samuel G. Freedman, Upon This Rock (New York: Harper Collins, 1993), p. 7.
2. Freedman, p. 3.
3. Cain Hope Felder, Troubling Biblical Waters (New York: Orbis, 1994), p. 114.
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