March 23, 2025
Luke 13.1-9
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It’s strange, I know, but it’s hard to believe that we are rapidly—very
rapidly—approaching the middle point of the season of Lent.
For
some of us, that might be a reason to rejoice.
For
those for whom this season gets a bit heavy, that is why we have our Lataere
Sunday next Sunday, with our rose vestments.
We
get a little half-way break for Lent.
For
me, I actually don’t mind this season of Lent.
It
gives me the opportunity to slow down a bit, to ponder, to make a concentrated
effort to do some very specific spiritual things.
And
one of those things is repenting.
Now,
I know.
That’s
such a “church word.”
Repent.
I
mean, it’s not a word we use in our day-to-day lives.
It
doesn’t come up in our lunch conversations.
Well,
maybe in mine.
But
probably not in yours.
But
Jesus seems pretty clear on this one,
In
today’s Gospel, we hear Jesus say some very stern words to us:
“…unless
you repent, you will all perish [just as those poor unfortunates whose blood
was mingled with sacrifices and on whom the tower of Siloam fell].”
Not
pleasant talk.
It’s
uncomfortable.
Especially
when we hear words like “repent” we definitely find ourselves heading into an
uncomfortable area.
We
find ourselves exploring the territory of self-abasement.
We
find some people lamenting and beating their breasts or throwing ashes in the
air over all of this repentance talk.
We
have been taught to a large extent that what we are dealing with in all of this
talk of repentance is that somehow God is angry and is going to punish us for
all the wrongs we did and that is why we must repent—repent, of course, meaning
“turn around.”
And
at first glance in our Gospel reading that’s exactly what we might be thinking.
God
is angry and we must repent—we must turn away from what is making God so angry.
But
if we look a bit closer and if we really let this reading settle in, we find that
we might be able to use this idea of repentance in a more constructive and
positive way.
In
our Gospel reading, we find Jesus essentially saying to us that we are not
going to bear fruit if we have cemented ourselves into our stubborn way of
seeing and believing.
And
that’s important!
A
stubborn way of seeing and believing.
The
kingdom that Jesus is constantly preaching about is not only this magical place
in the next world.
If
that’s all we believe about the Kingdom, then we are not really hearing the
scriptures.
And
belief like that lets us off the hook.
Essentially
then, all we have to do is work on getting in our magical kingdom in the sky—some
celestial Disney World.
Hopefully
without all the crowds.
And
the baby strollers.
But
Jesus, again and again, talks about the kingdom not just there, but here too.
It’s
fluid.
And
our job as followers of Jesus is to make this Kingdom a reality NOW.
Right
now.
It
is our job to allow the Kingdom into come into our midst, to give us a glimpse
of what awaits us.
And
the only way that happens, as we have heard again and again, is when we can
love God, love others and love ourselves.
And
I would add as well another aspect to that.
Scripture
mentions loving the stranger even more times that loving the neighbor, as
Barbara Brown Taylor has pointed out.
When
we do—when we love God, love ourselves,
love our neighbor, love the stranger—it is then we bear fruit.
It
is then wthat we see the Kingdom of God right here, right now.
When
we don’t love—and it is hard to love when we are stuck in all that negative
stuff like being angry or stubborn or resentful—then we are essentially the fig
tree that bears no fruit.
And
it’s important to see that this love needs to be spread equally.
It
is love for God, love for our neighbor, love for the stranger and love for
ourselves.
We
are not bearing full fruit when we are only doing two of the three.
The
love becomes lopsided.
If
we love only God and ourselves, but not our neighbors or strangers, then we are
in danger of becoming fanatical.
If
we love God and love others only and not ourselves, we become self-abasing.
But
if we strive to do all of it—if we strive to love fully and completely—then we
find ourselves being freed by that love.
And
it is freeing.
When
we talk of our stubbornness, when talking of closing ourselves off in anger and
frustration, we imagine that cementing feeling—that confinement.
But
when we speak of love, we imagine that cementing feeling being broken open.
We
find ourselves freed from our confinement.
We
allow ourselves to grow and flourish.
That’s
the point Jesus is making to us in our Gospel reading today.
And
that is why repentance is so essential for our spiritual growth, for the health
of our Christian community and for the furthering of the Kingdom in our midst.
Repentance
in this sense means turning away from our self-destructive, stubborn behavior.
The
Kingdom will not come into our midst when we refuse to love.
The
kingdom cannot be furthered by us or by anyone when we feel no love for God,
when we feel no love for others and when we feel no love for ourselves.
Repentance
in this sense means to turn around—to turn away from our self-destructive
behavior.
Repentance
in this sense means that we must turn around and start to love, freely and
openly.
Repentance
in this sense means that by repenting—by turning around—we truly are furthering
the Kingdom in our midst.
There’s
also another aspect to the analogy Jesus uses in today’s Gospel reading.
If
you notice, for three years the tree didn’t bear fruit and so the man who
planted the tree thought it was a lost cause.
But
the gardener protests.
He
gives the tree a bit of tender loving care and the tree begins flourishing.
What
I love about that is the fact that it says to us that none of us are lost
causes.
We
all go through times in our lives when we feel as though we are bearing no
fruit at all.
We
feel as though we are truly “wasting the soil” in which we live.
We
feel as though we are helpless and useless and that sometimes it feels as
though the pains and frustrations of our lives have won.
We
have been cemented into our negative feelings and emotions.
The
pains and frustrations of this life have stifled in us any sense of new life
and growth.
But
that little dose of TLC was able to bring that seemingly barren tree to new
life.
A
little bit of love and care can do wonders.
It
can change things.
It
can change us. It can change others.
It
can give life where it was thought there was no possibility of life before.
It
can renew and it can revitalize.
At
this time of year, we are probably made most aware of this.
Certainly
when we look around at the snow we got this morning, and underneath it our
seemingly dead and barren landscape, we might think in this moment that nothing
beautiful or wonderful can come from all this mud.
And
in this season of Lent, when we are faced with all this language of seeking
mercy, on recalling our failings and shortcomings and sins, in this
stripped-bare church season, it is hard to imagine that Easter is just a few
weeks away.
But,
in a sense, that is what repentance feelings like.
Repentance
is that time of renewal and revitalization that comes from the barren moments
in our lives.
Repenting
truly does help us to not only bear fruit, but to flourish.
Repenting
and realizing how essential and important love of God, love of our neighbors, love
of the stranger, love of self are in our lives
truly does allow us to blossom in the way that God wants us to flourish.
So,
as we journey together through this season of Lent, toward the Cross, and
beyond it to the Resurrection, let us do so with our hearts truly freed.
Let
us do so with a true, freeing and healthy love in our hearts, having turned
away from those things that are ultimately self-destructive
And
let the love we feel be the guide for our actions.
Through
all of this, let us bring about the Kingdom of God into our midst slowly, but
surely.
Let
the Kingdom come forth in our lives as blossoming fruit.
And
when it does, it is then that we will truly flourish.
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