Well, that’s just what we need today, isn’t it?
Division!
More rupture, polarization, friction, disunity.
In church.
As if we didn’t have enough division anywhere else.
I’m sorry, Jesus, could we maybe have a do-over, and this time you do come to bring peace?
And unity and cooperation and healing and, well, more of the things many of us probably came looking for this morning? More of the goodwill among all people that the angels promised when you were born?
No.
Jesus knows we need peace and unity and healing. And he also knows we need to take seriously what he’s saying today.
Probably at least in part because if we don’t listen to the uncomfortable parts of what he came to say, our unity and peace and cooperation won’t last through too many of the uncomfortable or divisive parts of our actual lives.
The thing is, when Jesus tells us that he came to bring not peace, but division, he’s not calling for civil war. He’s not stating intentions. He’s talking about the predictable, everyday consequences of taking his call to healing and repentance and transformation and love seriously in the middle of a world that doesn’t take that seriously.
Fire and friction, opposition between children and parents, households and families divided from each other are not God’s desire, not Jesus’ intent. They’re the consequences to the culture we live in when we embrace the full reality of Jesus’ preaching and miracles; his incarnation, death and resurrection.
Because you and I, like the disciples or onlookers who first heard Jesus say this, live in a world that prioritizes self-interested gain and marks of status, self-protection and being on the winning team, security and comfort and success.
That generates plenty of conflict, competition, and division among us individually, but we can also all be united in wanting a rising economy that will lift everyone’s standard of living, or the success of our group projects (whether that’s building a family or sustaining a business), or safe communities to live in and friendly neighborhoods.
We might disagree about the political or practical ways to achieve these things, but we do have cultural values in common.
And Jesus challenges those cultural values, right at their roots.
Take up your cross. Sacrifice yourself.
Put others – especially the people who don’t seem to have earned success and respect, people with disabilities, differences, disadvantages – ahead of yourself because God loves them.
Love your enemies. Yes, those enemies.
Love, honor, respect, support your neighbor as much as, and in the same way as, you would care for yourself.
Call out systems of injustice or oppression, in public as well as private, even when you’re talking to the big boss. Work constantly for justice and freedom and human dignity in small and private ways as well as public and powerful ways.
Forgive others. Seek forgiveness – admitting your wrongs and honestly trying to change the things that draw you into evil or error or hatred.
So much of those teachings of Jesus is what many of us want to do. Want to be people of love and generosity and forgiveness and transformation.
And many of us – when we try to live that love and generosity and justice and care like Jesus – get pushback and division from the culture around us.
When we spend serious money on paying down a stranger’s unjust medical debt, or feeding and supporting people who are homeless, we can get subtle or blatant messages from the culture around us that we should be saving that money to protect us against some unspecified future need, or that it’s a waste to help people who will still be poor or ill or on the street tomorrow. That the smart thing is to leave people who must have gotten into their mess themselves to get out of it themselves
(spoiler alert, most of the time people did not get into that trouble by themselves. It’s just a lot easier on our hearts and social systems to act as if they did).
When we try to vote or protest or advocate or write policies to protect the dignity of all, to keep justice from always sliding toward the side of the big boss or the best connections, to make our politics and business and educational worlds more generous – when we try to shape the world and society we live in according to Jesus’ teachings, we make enemies.
Or discover divisions in our families, find ourselves on the “other side” from friends we’ve always liked.
And let’s be clear, regardless of where we stand in the US political party system, we will always find people in our social networks – in our church even – who are convinced we’re wrong about the best way to legislate, or pay for, healing, peace, human dignity, freedom, cooperation, and justice.
The teachings, healings, transformation, holiness, and forgiveness that Jesus brings into our world are just fundamentally so different from the way that our social and economic world is structured that they will inevitably bring division.
Because our cultural norms are fundamentally rooted in human self-interest.
And Jesus is fundamentally rooted in God’s creativity and radical, fierce, love.
Jesus isn’t telling us today that he wants to destroy us.
He’s warning us that loving like God loves is hard. Is going to put us out of step with the world we actually live in. And will shatter our assumptions about what’s right, and about how we belong.
Not for division’s own sake.
But so that the world as we know it can be transformed, from the roots, into the world as God desires it to be. The world that God loves us to be.
And if we don’t know it’s hard, if we don’t listen to Jesus’ warning today, if we only look for universal peace and goodwill that comes in some great swoop and yet doesn’t change anything we’re comfortable with, we’re never going to be able to recognize the real shape and effects of God’s peace and unity and love, and receive it.
When we know that the glory, transformation, abundance, freedom and radical love of the world God is working to reveal is going to disrupt all we know and are used to, we, too, will have the anchor that holds us secure through the storms.
When we know it’s not easy, we’ll be ready to persist.
And we’ll find ourselves joining the “great cloud of witnesses” described in the Letter to the Hebrews today. Those who made it through the division and derision and fire of their own cultures, their own lives, generation after generation, and whose stories and work support us in our own embrace of Jesus’ radical love here and now.
Those generations of “witnesses” who join us in waiting for the full, fierce, transformative accomplishment of God’s promises of a vibrant, living, active peace among all people. The cloud of witnesses, this crowd of siblings in God’s family, long ago and here and now, who make sure that we are never doing the hard work of Jesus’ love alone.