Thursday, November 12, 2015

new eyes on giving



New eyes for giving 11081
Its that time of year again, when we look at our finances as a congregation and plan for the future; this year is particularly challenging, but we have a plan in place to move forward creatively until we find out what God wants this church to be.
And that’s where this text comes in.  Ah, I hear you say, it’s that focus-on-giving-our-money text…how we wealthy folk give out of our left over abundance and this poor woman gives her all.  Well yes, but no. 
If I were to share thoughts on this text going in that direction, I’d flip it around….the rich people give out of a scarcity mindset (there’s never enough so I’ll hold back), whereas the woman gives out of an abundance mindset (trusting God, I can give generously).  That in itself is enough of a challenge to my soul as I face next week’s dedication of our pledges of sharing, for I recognize myself in that scarcity thinking.
But I don’t think that’s all this text is about.
New, new, new, said Chris last week.   Making things new is all over scripture.  In Jesus the old reality is given up for a new reality, new ways of looking at life….so maybe we need new eyes for looking at giving, for example.
What did Jesus see that day at the temple?  Remember that in Mark’s gospel, this is a day or so before his arrest.  Two days before, he had created a scene in the temple area, upturning the tables of money changers and offering sellers, decrying what the temple had become.   So he’s hardly likely to be affirming support of that same institution two days later. I think he does indeed see beyond our actions to our mindsets, and he’s right about mine for sure, but there is a bigger issue here.
In putting together in one sentence abundance and poverty, Jesus highlights what is still wrong with our social and religious institutions today, including our churches.   We too have lost sight of our original call  of worshipping God, loving neighbor, caring for the world, and perpetuate a system that keeps a huge gap between abundance and poverty.
Jesus comes to connect human need with divine provision, says biblical scholar Walter Brueggemann, and with his new eyes he sees that the connection has been broken.   Human abundance has failed to act as God’s provision for human need. Those with status give to maintain an institution, and don’t even notice the poor who struggle to offer God something.  The temple, and maybe the church today, has become its own point.   Ouch.
Our leadership is trying hard to get beyond that, to see with new eyes. (airport story: visibility unlimited)   We need money to keep going yes, but we must be clear that it is not for self-perpetuation, but for ministry…..and not for self-serving ministry, but for ministry beyond these walls, and not just for ministry beyond these walls, but work that challenges the very systems that continue to separate abundance and poverty.  You’re tired of hearing me say we need to do church differently, but this is a big part of that difference.
It is time to make that connection new again….the connection between human need and God’s provision, to regain an abundant trust mindset, so we can use God’s abundance (for it’s not really ours) to meet our own needs and see it overflow with new giving of time, energy vision, and above all, Love….divine Love that permeates the universe, that is the only thing that can make that connection new.   We need to know that Love ourselves, bathe in it, and let it overflow abundantly, generously, so we become new see’ers, new givers, new livers.
Mechtild of Magdeburg, in the 13th  century wrote this, helping me realise there is more than enough to go around, more than enough money                                     more than enough time                                                                                                         more than enough energy                                                                                                    more than enough love                                                                                                         more than enough provision:
Divine love is so immensely great!                                                                                                                             Great is its overflow, for divine love is never still.                                                                                                          Always ceaselessly tirelessly                                                                                                                                                          it pours itself out so that the small vessel that is ourselves                                                                                               might be filled to the brim                                                                                                                                                       and might also overflow.
May we be filled with that love, overflow with that grace, live with that generosity, close the gaps in our hearts and minds and society,  and make the connection new.   Amen.

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