A Homily for the Seventeenth Sunday after Pentecost [Proper 27C], Preached at All Saints, Collingwood, Anglican Diocese of Toronto. Readings for this Sunday: Lamentations 1:1-6; Psalm 137; 2 Timothy 1:1-14; Luke 17:5-10
“How lonely sits the city that once was full of people! How like a widow she has become, she that was great among the nations” (Lamentations 1.1)
You may have noticed if you’ve been driving around this part of Collingwood that there’s been a lot of construction this summer. It’s been annoying, espoecially if you want to drive down Ontario Street, so recently I to scripture to see if there was any advice on how to manage my impatience during construction season, and I didn’t really find anything helpful.
There was the Tower of Babel, but that was a construction zone that never got finished. Imagine having paid for a penthouse suite in that! And then there were all the Israelites who got lured to Egypt with the promise of high paying construction jobs, and it turned out to be a pyramid scheme.
Unfortunately, scenes of destruction and desolation are far more common in scripture than are scenes of construction. Our first lesson begins with the spectacle of Jerusalem lying in ruins, silent and desolate. The armies of Babylon have torn down the walls, the sacred Temple has been looted and ruined , the kings descended from David and their people have been taken into slavery. It’s a scene that we would today call post-apocalyptic.
In the theology of ancient Israel, bad things happening was seen as a punishment. So the book of Lamentations explains that Jerusalem has been destroyed because “the Lord has made her suffer for the multitude of her transgressions”. The larger story here is that Israel’s leaders have followed foreign gods, they have abused and exploited the most helpless of their people, and so because Israel has broken its contract or covenant with God, God has brought the Babylonians to punish Israel.
So this idea that bad things happen to bad people is fairly old fashioned theology, but I don’t think it’s terribly interesting or helpful. It’s certainly rejected by Jesus (John 9). But I think the idea of a book called Lamentations is worth thinking about because we do live in a world where much is, well, lamentable. To lament is to express profound sorrow and grief for something terrible that has happened, without necessarily having any answers. For example, in a month we will be observing Remembrance Day Sunday, and the bagpipes, playing an ancient tune like Flowers of the Forest, and the sad of skirl of the pipes can’t explain why all those innocents died, it can only express sorrow for all the waste and destruction.
Perhaps the place of the lament in Christian theology is simply in the act of bearing witness to sin, to remembering tragedy and calling on God for justice. At one point later on in Lamentations 1, shortly after the passage form our first lesson, Jerusalem herself speaks: “Is it nothing to you, all ye that pass by? behold, and see if there be any sorrow like unto my sorrow, which is done unto me” (Lam 1.12). This is one of those passages that is read on Good Friday, as if to capture the suffering of Jesus on the cross, which is greeted with a shrug by the indifferent crowds. But the verse also speaks to us.
“Is it nothing to you, all you that pass by?” How is it that we have become so adept at ignoring the suffering of others, so insulated from things that should shock us? Whether it’s the random bits of violence that get circulated on video, or the relentless bombing that pulverizes cities and sends millions fleeing, images of hungry children in Gaza, or just the sickening drumbeat of environmental catastrophe and extinction, how have we become so good at tuning it out? Perhaps we look the other way simply to preserve our sanity, and most folks out there, I suspect, just can’t be bothered to care.
There’s a social media feed I follow from the Auschwitz Museum n Poland. Several times a day it shows the photos and names of people who died there. Sometimes you see them in their nice civilian clothes, blissfully unaware of what history has in store for them. Sometimes you see them with shaved heads in their striped prisoners’ uniforms as the ones selected for labour are processed, and you can see the shock on their faces. I don’t enjoy looking at these images, but somehow I feel that I have to. Lamentations reminds us that some things are worth mourining, so that even if all we can do is bear witness and remember, then that is something worth doing. In bearning witness and remembering, we stand alongside God and share God’s sorrow and compassion. We see the things that most people look away from, but which God sees.
A theology of Lamentation I think has to also acknowledge human complicity in the things that we lament. Citiies are bombed and innocents die because something goes fearfully wrong in the human heart. If you want an example of what I mean, think about the last verse of the psalm we read this morning. After expressing the sadness of the Israelite captives who are now slaves in Babylon, the psalm gives way to a shocking desire for revenge:
O Daughter of Babylon, doomed to destruction, happy the one who pays you back for what you have done to us!
Happy shall he be who takes your little ones, and dashes them against the rock! (Ps 137:8-9).
It’s a terribly shocking verse, and it makes me cringe when I read it and hear it in church, but I think it’s necessary that we hear it.
If we’re honest, the psalm is speaking truth about our human condition. It is not calling for the death of infants, but it is clear-eyed about how humans can fall into thinking and doing such things. As an expression of revenge, the psalm allows us to understand what has happened between Israelis and Palestinians for the last two years and beyond, and it speaks to any conflict in human history where people have thirsted for revenge. The psalm states that ruin and desolation don’t just happen to cities. Ruin and desolation can happen within the human heart.
There’s a famous line from the late director David Lynch who said that we must fix our hearts or die. Who can we turn to fix our hearts? I would finish simply by pointing to our gospel reading, and the disciples’ very natural cry to Jesus to increase their faith. Don’t we want the same? Don’t we want to believe more strongly and to feel that our faith is robust enough to get us through the challenges that we face in a sometimes awful world?
Jesus’ answer, about having faith the size of a mustard seed, can be a little misleading. I don’t think Jesus is talking about what we can do with our faith, but rather, who we put our faith in. I say this because in the words that follow, Jesus seems to link faith with the idea of following and obeying Jesus.
We may find the gospel’s imagery of being slaves difficult to take, but if we can set that distaste aside long enough, we can remind ourselves that our job as disciples is to hear what Jesus tells us to do and to do it as best we can. That’s obedience, and we serve Jesu, not because he’s a slaveholder, but because we choose to. We know that he loves us enough to serve us and die for us. As Jesus tells the disciples at the Last Supper, “For who is greater, the one who is at the table or the one who serves? Is it not the one at the table? But I am among you as one who serves” (Lk 22:27).
So yes, we are called to lament. If lament means that we see the evil around us, that we care and grieve and act as best we can, then we are being obedient disciples. And as obedient disciples, even if our faith is as small as a tiny seed, we give it to the Prince of Peace and Lord of Lords, trusting that he can cure those things which are lamentable. And we remember in the final book of the bible, in Revelation, we have a vision, not of a ruined city, but of a beautifully constructed city, the New Jerusalem. And maybe, at the end of the day, faith is opening ourselves so that God can build God’s city on the ruin and devastation that lie within our hearts.