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The Rev. Dr. María Teresa Palmer, Greetings from your sisters and brothers of Iglesia Unida de Cristo in Chapel Hill and from the students and faculty of David D. Jones Elementary Spanish Immersion Magnet in Greensboro. You have made them proud by inviting me here today to preach. For those of you who hail from North Carolina, I hope that this service will make you remember your state fondly. May you leave here with a renewed commitment to North Carolina that makes you ask: How does what I do today, bring my state closer to the kingdom of God? May you leave determined to do everything in your power to help it be that little peace of heaven that Tar Heel fans claim it already is. For those of you who have never been to North Carolina, I have to ask: What are you waiting for? An invitation? Well here it is: Yall are all invited to North Carolina. You want beaches? We have them. You want golf? You want mountains? And no, the Department of Tourism didnt pay me to sneak in a commercial. But many of you are making decisions on a daily basis that affect the people of North Carolina. We want you to come visit. Get to know us: long-time residents and new, adopted citizens, including the half million Hispanic/Latino residents who now call it home. Ben Bradburn, my National Cathedral liaison, told me to Just preach the gospel. This poses a very interesting challenge: to celebrate North Carolina, while preaching the gospel. Lets look at our scriptures: Jeremiah, Luke, Colossians. Jeremiah was not a prophet given to celebrating special days in the temple. His message was an indictment of the religious and political leaders of his day: Woe unto you, shepherds of Israel,and it landed him in a dried well. No habeas corpus and no court-appointed defense council for him either. But although the message was hard to stomach, the king would have been better off listening to Jeremiah, and Jeremiah told him so (26:1619). He might have saved his kingdom if he had listened. If his people had been without fear, unified and strengthened through righteous government they might have averted the coming exile. But the King and the ruling class were more interested in increasing their power base, forming alliances, and gaining trading privileges, than with achieving peace and prosperity for the working peoplepeople who lived in poverty and fear. Jeremiahs unwelcomed criticism of his society and its leaders was nothing new. Over 100 years earlier, a foreigner had preached in Israel saying that God was holding a plumb line to the wall and the edifice was about to come down (Amos 7:7-15), and it did come down. Amos, a native of Judah, had the courage to go north and call for justice at a time when Israel was experiencing prosperity and its leaders thought this was evidence of its most favored nation status with God. Amos pointed out that increased trade had brought wealth, but not for everyone. That there was no social equilibrium: there was incredible luxury for some (exotic vacations and impressive investment portfolios) while more and more people lived in poverty. Corruption at every level assured that justice was a function of how many friends you had in the court. Amos asks the leaders to hold up a plumb line to see what kind of house, of society they are building. Amos tells the leaders of Israel: Ive got a word for you from God: what you are building has to measure up. Its time for the test, and its really simple: is this a just society? Is there peace and prosperity for everyone? What do you think Amos and Jeremiah would have to say about our nation? What would they say
To bring about the kingdom of God that Jeremiah and Amos preached, we would have to be measuring each decision, private and corporate, to see if it is building a society that is fair and just and protects its most vulnerable citizens. Heres the amazing thing: the prophets are holding a plumb line to usas individuals and as a communityfor our own good. Because God loves us and wants us to partake of his kingdom. Because by acknowledging where the wall is not straight and fixing it, we will be building a life not just pleasing to God, but full of Gods presence and Gods love. Living by Gods standards sometimes feels extremely risky. Jeremiahs listeners understood: stop lining your pockets and accepting profitable contracts where you get rich by exploiting your workers. Stop using scare tactics to prop up your rule and exercise political control. Stop making secret deals with corrupt rulers, and bring to the people you are charged to care for prosperity and peace. Jeremiah tells us the leadership had failed to serve God/ to lead the people. The rulers used the power of the monarchy and the pomp and the splendor of religious ritual to call their people to war. The temple had become an icon marketed for tax and war purposes. The shepherds, or leaders, have forgotten that their positions of power come with a great responsibility to care for the people. They use the inevitable coming of war with Babylon to divert the peoples attention from the more systemic problem that injustice poses. The poor end up in military service while the rich get richer from the profits of war. In North Carolina, we know something about failed leadership. In the last year weve watched an elected official go to prison for using state contracts to win an election. Weve watched the trial of Lynndie England and heard the testimony of a medic who was called to the Abu Ghraib prison to treat abused prisoners. Weve seen the District Attorney in Alamance county use voter registration lists and his newly acquired powers under the Patriot Act to intimidate Hispanic voters. We have watched millions cut from our education budget, and were watching the re-segregation of our schools. Were watching the furniture industry and the textile industry leave our state and the unemployed workers struggle to buy the cheap WalMart version of the products they once manufactured. And in the face of desperate need for education and retraining in our state, weve held our breath while the senate debated the Perkins Vocational and Technical Education Act. Jeremiah claims there is hope: a new branch from the house of Davidas Christians we read this as Jesus. All our texts today speak of fear, yet the new ruler will bring peace and will rule with justice. Now, there are many ways of being a servant-leader. My friend and colleague, Rev. Alma Purvis, who toils every day in my school as curriculum facilitator, and leaves tired to the bone, but goes on to the Beloved Community Center to help organize the truth-and-reconciliation march and to organize parents in the housing projects. Doña Elena, widowed mother of 12 and refugee from Colombia, who is a housekeeper 50 hours per weekno holidays, no overtime, no health careis also a deacon at Iglesia Unida and a health promoter in our community, organizing childrens programs and teaching young immigrants how to care for their babies and insure their childrens health. Jesus says that even if we give a glass of water to the thirsty, weve rendered service unto him. And Im sure you are each performing many good works. I read about a group of representatives, senators and staffers building together a Habitat for Humanity home. Thats a good thing. When important, busy people find time to mentor students, or volunteer at a soup kitchen, thats a good thing. But thats not leadership that will bring about the kingdom of God. Those are acts of mercy and kindness. Jeremiahs talking here about a whole nation, not the deserving poor we choose to favor. Were talking about EVERYONE deserving to live without fear. Whether they live in blue villages or red villages. Whether they have well-connected Rabbis or are still waiting for the temple to issue them green cards. Today we celebrate across denominations Christ the King day. That church Peter was given charge of recognizes only one head: Christ. We should lead like he led, serving the people he came to serve: those on the margins and those condemned by society like the thief on the cross, for whom Jesus still found grace and forgiveness in our gospel passage. Colossians reminds us that Christ was that perfect shepherd. A servant leader who valued justice and mercy above his own life. In the context of a global economy, where corporations have more power than many national governments; where there are still 20 million human beings living in slavery; in a world where there are some who are working to destroy us, some have questioned the relevance of the gospel. Can we really listen to scripture and build the kingdom of God? Can we afford to follow a servant leader who seeks reconciliation and peace? The scriptures answer emphatically: (Colossians 1) May you be made strong with all the strength that comes from his glorious power, and may you be prepared to endure everything He has rescued us from the power of darkness and transferred us into the kingdom of his beloved Son, in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins. When Benji was about 3 years old, we took him to see a concert at the college where my husband Mike taught. Mike, a former percussionist, had been recruited by the music faculty to help with a piece by playing the cymbals at a couple of critical points. Not long after that, somebody asked Benji what his dad did at the college. He said. He stands up in front of the people and does chass. While it is a tremendous honor to be here, it would be a poor legacy indeed if my children could only say about me, she preached at the National Cathedral.Or about you, He was interviewed on Meet the Press. He stood up in the senate and [chass] The words a clanging cymbalcome to mind (1 Cor. 13). What will we have accomplished to build a kingdom that honors our Lord? What did we do to bring peace and prosperity to the poor? To bring peace? Christ commanded us to be like him. Could you extend the grace and love he did? Probably not? But we could do a whole lot better than we are doing. Its time to move beyond band-aid solutions that rescue the cute, lovable individuals and look at the health of the whole flock. Its time to do some sheep-tending that truly honors God in Christ. North Carolina is called the land of the Long Leaf Pine. And there is a toast: here is to the land of the Long Leaf Pine, Maybe that is how we can celebrate North Carolina and be what the Kingdom of God asks us to be: leaders who make sure that the weak grow strong and that all have the opportunity to grow great. From North Carolina we will continue to pray that God will give youour shepherds and leaderscourage and strength. Amen. |