Sunday, February 28, 2016

God enlivens our vision – Exod 3:1-15, Luke 13:1-9

Lent, Yr C, Wk 3; Notre Dame (Farley Hall)

I wonder how many burning bushes Moses walked past.  We’d all like to think that we’d notice something like that, that it takes no special spiritual gift to notice something, to draw close to it out of curiosity, and then be surprised by God.  But, we walk past burning bushes all the time.  That kind of attentiveness that attends to the world in a sensitive enough manner to notice how God might be calling out to us isn’t something we just have automatically.  It is a gift, but it’s a gift we give thanks for by working to develop it, just like musical talent, or athletic ability.


I don’t think it’s any coincidence at all that Moses only notices a burning bush after he begins tending his father-in-law’s flock.  Shepherding, in all the various forms that can take, develops that attentiveness in us.  When we learn to truly attend to the people around us with the kind of attentiveness that’s necessary to tend a flock, or actively love our neighbor, at the same time we really do develop a keener attentiveness to God.  Maybe you’ve seen some of this through a job, a volunteer activity, or just well-lived family or friend relationships.


For me, my growth-spurt in that kind of attentiveness came when I was teaching.  Before I entered seminary, I spent two years teaching community college math inside San Quentin prison.  I always hold that you teach people math, you don’t just teach math, but inside there, the inmates drew on me for more support more regularly than anywhere else I’d taught.  I found myself being reached out for help with far more than geometry, mainly just to be a listening ear.  And as I reflected on those experiences, that they felt so right, but I felt like I needed to be in them differently, I started to wonder what ‘differently’ might mean, and I started to realize that that had to involve asking serious questions about priesthood and religious life.  That was my Moses moment.  It wasn’t really a singular moment for me (and, actually, Exodus narrates a few similar moments for Moses, of which we’ve heard one tonight, so it probably wasn’t for him either), but it was that same experience: of tending a flock, looking out for people, raising my concern for others, and discovering that enabled a profounder encounter with God, a clearer vision of what He had in store for me.

Because that’s what’s at the heart of Moses’ experience: equipped with attentiveness from his work with the sheep, he’s readied for a deeply personal encounter with God, and that leads to a new clarity about what his role will be in the liberation of God’s people.  It’s a face-to-face encounter, where God puts himself on first name terms with Moses.  It’s a sanctifying encounter, which makes holy the very ground, and God invites Moses to immerse himself in that sanctity, to take his shoes off and let the holy sound surround his smelly feet.  And Moses needs to be immersed in that holiness, because he’s about to be sent off to do something incredibly difficult: to cooperate with God to make His people free.

That’s what can happen to us.  It’s the opposite of a vicious circle; it’s a virtuous circle.  We start by truly caring for others, attending to them, and our attentiveness is built up.  That opens our eyes to God’s presence all around us, invites us to immerse ourselves (even our smelly feet; the parts of ourselves we think even God can’t love), immerse ourselves in holiness, and that equips us to understand our part in God’s ongoing project of redemption; liberating us from all that holds us down, all that holds us back from being the people he calls us to be.

And if we do that, we won’t get stuck in the position of the people who interrupt Jesus in today’s gospel.  Jesus is in the middle of teaching, and people come to tell him about a Roman massacre of Jews.  You might think this interruption is perfectly OK, that they’re going to ask Jesus to pray or just invite everyone to mourn together.  But, no: Jesus knows what they want; they want to victim-blame; they want to judge the slain.  And it’s actually in some ways a very natural response: we hear of something horrible happening to someone and we want to reassure ourselves that something that bad could never happen to us, because we’d never make the one fatal mistake they did that led to their tragedy.


Jesus says no to that.  Jesus says that if we look to tragedy and try to spot the victim’s sin, our vision is faulty.  We’re not attending to things like shepherds.  We’re curious spectators, not shepherd actors.  If we want to turn our gaze to start looking for sins, it’s not in other people we should look; it’s in ourselves.  And, he goes on to illustrate, that’s not all there is to conversion.  Conversion also sometimes means looking at situations of tragedy and failure, situations like a fruitless fig-tree and daring to see hope, see resurrection.  But, we don’t just say we see hope and move on.  Conversion moves us to make real our solidarity, to collaborate with seemingly fruitless trees, to offer to cultivate and fertilize.  That’s the kind of behavior that opens us up to encounter with God, and that’s the kind of behavior that we’re strengthened for by those encounters.

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