I tell you, unless you repent, you will all perish just like those Galileans slaughtered with their sacrificial animals. Like the eighteen people under that collapsed tower at Siloam.
Unless you repent, you will all die.
Feel uncomfortable yet?
I do.
I hear this type of rhetoric from TV preachers after hurricanes, fires, other fatal catastrophes – “you’ll all die like this if you don’t repent/make America a Christian nation, etc.” Sometimes explicit, sometimes just implied.
But today we are hearing it from Jesus.
Jesus. The one who literally came to save us from disaster and evil.
From Jesus, while he is telling a crowd in Jerusalem that the TV Evangelist and Pontificating Politician trope of “disaster is God’s punishment for sinners” is wrong. Telling the crowd that their local equivalent to “fires in LA are proof of God’s judgement on sinful sexuality or immoral diversity and equity” is plain nonsense.
God doesn’t drop walls on people because they are worse humans than others.
God doesn’t send fire or tsunami or indiscriminate slaughter by Roman-collaborating law-enforcement to punish people for being bad.
(He told us that two thousand years ago and we still haven’t all managed to internalize it.)
Because Jesus is very clear that disaster is not God’s punishment for sin.
But, he tells us, if you do not repent, you will die like them.
That seems a little… self-contradictory, maybe?
But it’s not.
Because Jesus is telling us that God doesn’t punish that way.
AND that it’s vital and urgent to be right with God, whether we happen to die in our beds at a great old age, or suddenly in a meteor strike.
That if we don’t repent, we – like the local disaster victims cited in today’s conversation – will die without having found the center and purpose of our lives.
Because when Jesus talks about repentance, he’s not talking about making a list of our faults and misdeeds and promising not to do the Bad Things again.
When Jesus says “repent”, it means turning your whole heart, your primary attention, toward God’s presence and work in this world. Turning your whole being to the love of God calling us to be transformed by God, to love like God.
Of course, that’s easier said than done for many of us.
Jesus knows that.
It can be quite difficult, often, to understand what God is actually up to in the world. And I think it’s a pretty safe guess that was as much of a challenge in Jerusalem twenty centuries ago as it is in the US right now.
Or in Gaza, or Congo, or a lot of other places in the world today.
Turning our whole selves to God, getting fully aligned with God’s love and action in the world, would be a lot easier if God would make it obvious how the day-to-day obstacles and frustrations of our lives have anything to do with God’s love for all people.
Turning our whole hearts to God’s will would be a lot simpler if Jesus clearly explained how international chaos or a mounting pile of national lawsuits, or anything else on the internet or evening news is supposed to help carry humanity to eternal life.
But we probably won’t get the clear memo explaining all that this week. Or even in our lifetimes.
And still, urgently, that turning toward God is what we need. That shifting of our attention toward unconditional love, toward the possibility of transformation, toward awe at the holy presence choosing to be with us, is what Jesus urgently warns us toward, demands of us – in the face of frustrations and chaos.
Because we need it, to truly live.
Sometimes we need it merely to survive.
And we absolutely need it to “bear fruit”.
To become people whose own actions and choices and words nourish others, and ourselves, with God’s love. Like Moses, in our story today, turning from “Why me?” to the deep awareness of God’s promise to be with us, and becoming a beacon of liberation for God’s people.
We need that turn toward God to become people who shape the world around us – a little at a time – to be more like God’s kingdom: generous, and brave, and hope-filled. Growing and life-giving for us, and for others.
We need that shifting of our hearts toward the active love of God in order to “bear fruit” of words and actions and choices that may even truly save someone else’s life, or soul and heart. Or save our own.
Our world needs that fruit from us now.
It always has.
And we ourselves need to experience that fruit of peace and generosity and profound hope and insistent love growing in and through us. Because the fruit we bear for God and others nourishes our own souls first.
And it’s who and what we were created to be and do.
But Jesus knows we don’t pull off that essential, urgent transformation all by ourselves.
You heard the story he told us, of the gardener who wants to help that fruitless fig tree become fruitful. Who knows that a fruitless tree can’t be sustained, but says, “let me do everything possible to help this tree grow and bear. Let this round of the seasons be an opportunity, even if it’s all over this time next year.”
There’s still time to repent.
Still time to bear fruit.
Still time to be helped, guided, and nurtured so that we can.
And equally, urgently, THIS is the time.
This place, this season, this moment as Jesus talks to us, is the time to urgently reorient ourselves to God, away from the demands and noise of cultural expectations, of daily business, of “success” and “failure” and “how it is.”
Before the tree is cut down, this, urgently, is the time to bear fruit – to confidently seek God’s love amid the noise, and let God’s love grow through us into generosity, and courage, and nourishment, and practical, everyday care for one another: helping hands, encouraging words, demands for justice, food for this day, pain relief, inspiration, joy.
And the good news is that there is someone to help us - someone who is working to loosen the tight-packed soil of anxiety, strain, and self-interest around our hearts. Working to fertilize our souls with awareness of the strengthening, life-giving presence of God.
And when we respond, when we start to open ourselves, draw from God’s earth and God’s people the nourishment we need to bear fruit, every degree we turn toward God, the easier it gets (a tiny bit at a time) to see God’s love at work.
Every step you or I take closer to diving entirely into the flow of love and transformation God pours out into the world, the clearer it is to see God’s work bringing love here, everywhere – right in the middle of all those daily frustrations and obstacles, right in the path of the chaos or intractable challenges swirling around the globe.
And the more we may become the gardeners who help others bear fruit.
So we cannot wait – truly – we cannot wait to begin.