Sunday, October 31, 2021

Twenty-Third Sunday after Pentecost, Proper26 Yr B Oct 31 2021




Twenty-Third Sunday after Pentecost, Proper26 Yr B Oct 31 2021

Ruth 1:1-18, Psalm 146, Hebrews 9:11-14, Mark 12:28-34

 

Jesus may have been asked the hardest final exam question ever. Which is the greatest commandment, and why, give examples, show your work, and cite your sources. 

 

You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength. You shall love your neighbor as yourself. There is no other commandment greater than these. And we spend our entire lives trying to work this out. 

 

So today I want to tell you a story about how we got to this great commandment, consider this me showing my work and citing my sources. 

 

The Ten Best Ways story follows.

 

Desert Box

People of God

heart-shaped box with commandments

Mount Sinai

 

This is the desert. It is a dangerous place. People do not go into the desert unless they have to. There is no water there, and without water we die. There is no food there. Without food, we die.

 

When the wind blows, it changes the shape of the desert. People get lost. Some never come back.

 

In the daytime, the sun is so hot that people must wear lots of clothes to protect themselves from the sun and the blowing sand. The sand stings when it hits your skin. The sun scorches you by day. At night it is cold. You need many clothes to keep warm The desert is a dangerous place. People only go there if they have to.

 

(Put some of the People of God in the far-right corner. Arrange them in a circle. Also, place Mt. Sinai in the left hand corner of the Desert Box, the corner nearest you.)

 

The People of God went through the water into freedom. They were free! So Miriam led the dancing! 

 

Now that the people are free, they can go anywhere they want to go and do anything they want to do. So where should they go now? What should they do? Where will they go now? What is the best way?

 

God loved the People so much that God gave them the Ten Best Ways to Live. Sometimes these ways are called the Ten Commandments. 

 

(Show the heart-shaped box as you say this, but don’t open it yet.)

 

As the people traveled across the desert, they followed fire by night and smoke by day. They began to complain. Some even wanted to go back to Egypt. There was not enough food. There was not enough water. God helped Moses find food and water. Finally they came to the great mountain.

 

(Begin to move the people to your left. Mt. Sinai is in the lower left corner of the Desert Box, closest to you, so that most of the children can see what happens. Move the people carefully until they are all at the foot of the mountain.)

 

The people came close to the mountain, but they were afraid to touch it. Mt. Sinai was covered with fire and smoke. Moses was the only one who had the courage to climb up into the fire and smoke to meet God. 

 

(Move Moses up to the top of the rock. AS he moves up the mountain, hide the figure in your hand to show his disappearing in the smoke.)

 

When Moses was on top of the mountain, he came so close to God, and God came so close to him that he knew what God wanted him to do. 

 

God wanted him to write the Ten Best Ways to Live on stones and bring them down the mountain to the people.

 

God gave the Ten Commandments to Moses. Moses gave them to the people and they gave them to us. 

 

(Present the heart-shaped box, and then open it. Begin with the summary. One tablet says, “Love God.” The other one says, “Love People.” A third triangular piece completers the shape of a heart and says, “God loves Us.” As you lay these pieces flat in the sand, read them aloud.) 

 

Here are the Ten Best Ways. when we put the Ten Best Ways all together, this is what they tell us: Love God. Love People. God Loves Us. when we say “us,” we mean God’s love for each one of us as well as all of us together. 

 

(Place the tablets in a line behind “Love God”) 

1)    Don’t serve other gods.

2)    Make no idols to worship.

3)    Be serious when you say my name

(Place the fourth tablet in the middle because it tells us how to love both God and people)

4)    Keep the Sabbath holy.

(Read the next tablets slowly and place them behind “Love People.”)

5)    Honor your parents.

6)    Don’t kill.

7)    Don’t break your marriage. You know, when people get married they think they will be married forever. Sometimes that just doesn’t work out. 

8)    Don’t steal.

9)    Don’t lie.

10) Don’t even want what others have.

 

These are all hard. God did not say that these are the “ten easy things to do.” They are the Ten Best Ways. They are hard, perhaps even impossible, but we are supposed to try. They mark the best way – like stones marking a path. 

(End of story)

 

These ten best ways get translated into the Shema that Jesus repeats when questioned by the scribe, and it is extraordinary. This was not a new thing with Jesus. This love ethic is built into the law and the Ten Best Ways. 

What Jesus does is to restate the commandment. 

 

So now we wonder. This is where you participate. I wonder what it means for you, that the greatest commandment is, You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength. You shall love your neighbor as yourself. And that the Lord your God, the Lord is one.

 

We have been hearing from Mark for weeks now these stories of following Jesus. Following Jesus is about being healed from blindness, it's about seeing with new eyes. Following Jesus is about being baptized into the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. Following Jesus is to walk with the poor. Following Jesus is to be in relationship with all of God's creation, and to protect the most vulnerable of God's creation. Following Jesus is to cast off the idol, to lay down that which is killing you. Following Jesus is to live one's life as if God matters. Amen.

 

No comments:

Twenty-fifth Sunday after Pentecost, Yr B, Proper 27, Nov 10 2024, St. M and M, Eagan MN

Twenty-fifth Sunday after Pentecost, Yr B, Proper 27, Nov 10 2024, St. M and M, Eagan MN 1 Kings 17:8-16, Psalm 146, Hebrews 9:24-28, Mark 1...