Imagine this:
someone comes to your house – or even meets you on the street – scoops up your car keys, takes the wheel of your car, and says “Hop in; let’s go!”
someone comes to your house – or even meets you on the street – scoops up your car keys, takes the wheel of your car, and says “Hop in; let’s go!”
What do you do?
hop right in (passenger seat or
back?) – ask where – grab keys back, etc
What I do when someone else is
driving depends a lot on who the person is; on the relationship we have.
But this is the question – well,
one question – implied for us in the scripture we hear today, this little poetic history from the Letter to the Hebrews:
By faith, Abraham obeyed when
he was called to set out for a place that he was to receive as an inheritance,
and he set out, not knowing where he was going.
By faith, Abraham and Sarah and
Isaac and Jacob, our ancestors, expected the impossible. By faith they lived on
their expectations of posterity and future homeland more than on the reality of
those things, waited or acted on the promise of God, even when they couldn’t
know where they were going, or what God was doing about it.
Faith, the way it’s described
today, is really a lot like getting into the passenger seat – or even back seat
– of your own car when someone else is driving you to an unknown destination.
There are reasons why any of us
might do that. Perhaps the driver promises to take you to somewhere you really
want to be and don’t know how to get to: the moon, or true love, or a world
without gun massacres, childhood cancer, cruelty, hate, or partisan politics – the
“promised land”; and your longing for
those things is enough to take the risk of trusting the driver.
Or perhaps you know the driver
well enough to want to go anywhere with them.
Sometimes you’re drawn to the adventure,
and sometimes you just don’t see any other choice.
That’s the experience of Abraham,
Sarah, Isaac, and Jacob we heard about today. The writer (or perhaps the
preacher; this document for “the Hebrews” really reads more like a sermon than
a letter) wants us to see ourselves in this same journey, to recognize
ourselves in the invitation to live by faith. Wants us, as much
as our biblical ancestors, to experience the substance, the reality of things we hope and long for;
experience the here-and-nowness of things that are fundamentally intangible,
things unseen.
This preacher – the one whose
words are recorded in the Bible, and, for that matter the preacher in your
pulpit today – wants all of us, you and me, to experience the active, living
reality of God in our own lives and in the world around us. Wants us to be able
to know in our hearts and bodies and minds the concrete reality of God’s active interest and
love that guides and directs us, and know it whether or not we ever literally
hear that direction and love in clear words, or see with our eyes the success
of our guided actions.
That’s not easy.
Most of the time, on those rare
occasions when I give someone else my keys and get into the passenger seat of
my car, I…well, I kind of drive anyway. My foot will pump the imaginary brakes.
I give unnecessary directions about which lane to be in, or try to speed up the
car by silent willpower.
Even when I know I don’t need to –
there’s plenty of time and the driver knows what they are doing – I
automatically try to exercise control.
Perhaps you do, too.
In your life, if not in the car.
Perhaps you really like to do turn-by-turn route
planning – careful management of your
time, your money, your efforts and achievements – even when the destination isn’t
all that clear: when you don’t know exactly where your career should go, what
your kids will be like at 18 or 50, what you want to do in retirement, or what
on earth happens after the diagnosis is confirmed or the new job is
secured.
Or perhaps you don’t plan, but keep
your hands on the wheel, making sure you have control to switch lanes, change
the route, make your own decisions in the moment at all times.
These are natural human
tendencies, reinforced every day by the
voices of our world that preach self-reliance and independence, and by the
voices of the news that proclaim uncertainty and danger.
The tendency and temptation to keep
things in our own control are reinforced regularly by the voices of a world
that tell us we can’t trust the government, or strangers, or what you read on
the internet, or hear from the other news services, or much of anything or
anybody but ourselves.
Those voices tell us we can’t do
something new, and that we can’t depend on anyone else to help us achieve what
we long for.
But faith is all about trust. In fact, faith fundamentally is
trust.
And trust is how we rest even when
we are restless; how we love even when we are out of liking and goodwill; how
we can act for good in the face of despair, how we
achieve and discover more together than we ever could alone.
Trust is how we have living,
growing relationships with anyone.
That’s why God wants faith
for us.
Because God wants a living,
growing, relationship with you. With me. Individually and together.
God longs for the kind of trust and delight that allows us to eagerly hand God the keys and the wheel.
God longs for the kind of trust and delight that allows us to eagerly hand God the keys and the wheel.
God wants our hearts to be free to
experience the wonder of the journey without the anxiety of deadlines; to trust
whatever speed we’re moving, and to rest in quiet, deep, companionship when God just pulls to the side of the
road and waits in silence for a while (you know, those times when nothing
seems to be happening or moving or changing tor the better, no matter how much
you work or plan or write to Congress or follow the doctor’s prescriptions or
pray).
God doesn’t want us to give up
planning and responsibility for our own lives, but God does want us to long for
those destinations we can’t possibly get to alone – destinations like profound
peace of heart, unconditional love, unshakable connection to God, the
transformation of our world into a generous land of universal peace and
prosperity, safety and welcome and shared joy.
God wants this longing in us, with a readiness to try routes we can’t plan for ourselves, because living only in what we ourselves can manage and plan and achieve is idolatry and isolation, and ultimately despair.
God wants this longing in us, with a readiness to try routes we can’t plan for ourselves, because living only in what we ourselves can manage and plan and achieve is idolatry and isolation, and ultimately despair.
Now, you can’t will
yourself to that deep trust and faith. Trust takes time, and practice – lots of
time and practice – in any relationship. Trust and faith are mutual, not
singular. That’s why faith isn’t willpower. It’s a gift of God, who plants seeds
of love and faith within us, faith and love that grow into trust, sometimes in
ways we don’t recognize. And God asks us to nurture those seeds with prayer and
sacraments and scripture and community.
Because God knows that without
that faith and trust, we won’t get to experience the reality of what we long
for, the proof of unprovable love, the concreteness of intangible
possibility and joy, and God wants that for us with all God’s heart.
That’s why God keeps reaching out
for our car keys and inviting us to hop in,
so that God can take us, in
unexpected and unpredictable ways, to the healing of the world and our own
healing, to the substance of all that we long for, the conviction of wonder and
grace and joy.