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​Letter From Pastor Lina

November 25, 2020

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Dear Lake B Friends and Family,
 
Below I am sharing an article written by Rev. Tali Hairston for the weekly Street Psalms Publication called, “Word From Below.”  It is a short reflection on this Sunday’s lectionary passage found in Matthew 25.   This is also the passage we will be revisiting on Sunday morning with Cote Soerens and Miguel Escobar.  It is a great challenge for us to remember what vision motivates our charity... enjoy...


More Than Charity
Rev. Tali Hairston
 
“And the King will answer them, “Truly I tell you, whatever you did for the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me.”  Matthew 25:31-46
 
Identify with those who have nothing. Not in charity alone so as to be a helper of those without food, clothes, or who are imprisoned. Rather, identify with their humanity. I was hungry, thirsty, naked, a stranger, imprisoned, and sick. That is me!

We often read Matthew 25:31 – 36 as a judgement of those who neglect the poor, and a call to acts of charity. But when we center the text on Jesus, a theme begins to emerge—Jesus identifying himself as the ‘least of these.’ This act of complete solidarity goes much further than charity, it completely upends the dynamics of power and poverty.
            
In the book of Matthew, chapters 24 and 25 can be described as a set of sermons or teachings given over several days. Today’s text comes from the last of those sermons, and it is often read through the lens of judgement. The Son of man comes with angels and a throne and the nations of the earth gather together before him. Jesus plays the role of a discerning king who separates out the sheep from the goats. The sheep inherit the kingdom prepared from the very beginning of the world. But the goats have a much more dire fate. To be judged as sheep or goat hinges largely on how they treated the poor, hungry, thirsty, and the stranger.
   
 
It is within the context of caring for those experiencing poverty, homelessness, or sickness that a more transformative message in the text actually transforms the dynamics of power at the foundations of poverty. We live in a world of great wealth and extreme poverty, homelessness, food insecurity, a global pandemic, and displaced people groups. We are called to be generous with our resources. And while doing necessary charity, if we are not careful, we can miss the good news.
            
If you look beneath the judgement of a nation’s people as sheep or goats, you see the distance the Son of Man travels in this text. It was not that the sheep, the righteous, visited the imprisoned knowing it was Jesus. The good news is not that the people did good things to or for poor people and that made them righteous. The righteous unknowingly were serving the King because the King is the sick, the imprisoned, hungry, and thirsty. He himself is the stranger.

Can there be any greater check on power in regard to poverty than for Jesus to envision a world where power authentically relates to poverty instead of demonizing it or even pitying it? We know the hungry, thirsty, and sick followed Jesus as he walked from city to city. Undoubtedly, they heard this prophetic vision of the Kingdom. Can you hear someone with an ailment from birth saying, “the one who claims to be king, sees himself as me.” Might a child whose father is wrongly imprisoned by King Herod, hear Jesus and believe that to be the good news. Jesus is not king of the ‘least of these.’ The ‘least of these’ is king.


 
I wonder if I have the imagination to see Jesus in the humanity of all people.  Moreover, I wonder if the Church as a whole can live into this kind of “seeing”.   At the risk of sounding over-the-top idealistic, wouldn’t the world be a kinder place if we endeavored to see Jesus in “the least of these”.  This is a worthy aspiration for those who call themselves disciples – called to see and follow this Jesus.  And are we ready for what that means? 
 
This is a perfect place for us to begin our Advent season in just a week;  a season of waiting, of wondering, of expecting, of new ways of seeing Christ in the world.  
 
Grace and Peace,
 
Pastor Lina


 
PS – We need help!  Please take a look at these volunteer positions and see if you might be interested. If so, contact Shearl.

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Photo used under Creative Commons from NathalieSt
  • Home
  • WHO WE ARE
    • STATEMENT OF FAITH
    • STAFF
    • COUNCIL OF ELDERS
  • LIFE AT LAKE B
    • MINISTRIES >
      • PIVOT Young Adult Ministry
      • SUNDAY SCHOOL >
        • Little Friends Connect - Pre K - 1st Grade
      • AFTER SCHOOL / SUMMER PROGRAM
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