At Home with God
Sunday, August 26
Thirteenth Sunday after Pentecost
Focus Theme
At Home with God
Weekly Prayer
Gracious God, although we once were strangers, you receive us as friends and draw us home to you. Set your living bread before us that, feasting around your table, we may be strengthened to continue the work to which your Son commissioned us. Amen.
Focus Scripture
Psalm 84 (see also 1 Kings 8: [1, 6, 10-11], 22-30, 41-43)
How lovely is your dwelling place,
O God of hosts!
My soul longs, indeed it faints
for the courts of God;
my heart and my flesh sing for joy
to the living God.
Even the sparrow finds a home,
and the swallow a nest for herself,
where she may lay her young, at your altars,
O God of hosts, my Ruler and my God.
Happy are those who live in your house,
ever singing your praise.
Happy are those whose strength is in you,
in whose heart are the highways to Zion.
As they go through the valley of Baca
they make it a place of springs;
the early rain also covers it with pools.
They go from strength to strength;
the God of gods will be seen in Zion.
O Sovereign God of hosts, hear my prayer;
give ear, O God of Jacob!
Behold our shield, O God;
look on the face of your anointed.
For a day in your courts is better
than a thousand elsewhere.
I would rather be a doorkeeper
in the house of my God
than live in the tents of wickedness.
For the Sovereign God is a sun and shield;
God bestows favor and honor.
No good thing does God withhold
from those who walk uprightly.
O God of hosts,
happy is everyone who trusts in you.
All Readings for this Sunday
1 Kings 8:(1, 6, 10-11), 22-30, 41-43 with Psalm 84 or
Joshua 24:1-2a, 14-18 with Psalm 34:15-22
Ephesians 6:10-20
John 6:56-69
Focus Questions
1. What does it mean for a church to be a place that offers “alternative imagination”?
2. What makes a church “sacred ground”?
3. How do you feel when you see a church building converted, for example, into condos or boutique shops?
4. How does the image of church as “nest” connect with your spiritual life?
5. What memories do you have of feeling close to God in church? In nature?
Reflection
by Kate Huey
Many years ago, I belonged to a parish that built a beautiful (and expensive) new stone and glass church across from our “old” church, a simple, box-like structure that had been designed ahead of time to be converted into a gymnasium for the attached school. As we prepared for our move into the new church and our final days in the old one, I thought about the times I had felt close to God in that humble space: late at night, alone in the sanctuary, during a weekend retreat, with only candlelight to see the shadowy lines of cross and statues; at my son’s First Communion service, listening to him sweetly sing a song about God being near at hand; in the chaos of Christmas Eve children’s pageants, with angels and shepherds (two of them belonging to me) jumbled together in a procession of sorts, trying to keep their headgear straight while they sang carols as only children can, with the voices of angels. It didn’t seem to me that one needed a magnificent new structure to feel close to God, to be “at home with God.”
Our readings this week express the feelings that our ancestors in faith experienced many centuries ago, looking at their temple not as a well-worn-out building but as a destroyed one, as ruins that seemed to symbolize their own crushed and broken hopes. They looked back, in the reading from I Kings, to a glorious and happier time, when Solomon dedicated the beautiful new temple and celebrated the arrival of the ark of the covenant with a long prayer that combines praise of God with ominous reminders of what would happen if the people strayed from faithfulness to God. The reading from I Kings obviously goes well with Psalm 84, a joyful song of praise not of a building but of the God whose presence is mysteriously and powerfully experienced there.
“But will God indeed dwell on the earth? Even heaven and the highest heaven cannot contain you, much less this house that I have built!” (I Kings 8:27). The psalmist begins by calling the temple God’s “dwelling place,” but of course “dwelling” in a place doesn’t have to mean being contained by it. Some of the language of the psalm reminds us of romantic literature, with a soul that longs and faints, and a heart and flesh itself singing for joy: an embodied, whole-self experience of love. Joel LeMon observes that this is the only time in the Old Testament that the word translated as “lovely” refers to “an inanimate object” rather than a person; it’s usually translated as “‘beloved,’ according to its root,” which means “to love.”
Psalm 84 is one of the “Songs of Zion” which, Walter Brueggemann explains, “serve to celebrate, legitimate, and enhance Zion-Jerusalem as the epicenter of reality wherein YHWH dwells permanently in a way that guarantees the city,” thereby making the people feel safe–after all, God is in their city. Could there be a better source of security? However, Brueggemann seems to see a tension between the Temple as a place for “the practice of alternative imagination” and its role as “part of the urban-political-economic establishment.” In the first case, I think he’s talking about a place where we can imagine how things should and could be, rather than how they actually are. However, he compares the latter role to that of the National Cathedral in Washington, which provides a religious backdrop that can enhance the power and prestige, for example, of political leaders as they address the nation. Is your church a place that offers “alternative imagination”?
Establishment religion or sacred ground?
The Songs of Zion, including Psalm 84, could express “establishment” religion, then, and the memory of glory days, the memory of power and of feeling important and safe in the eyes and care of God. This seems to be true for people of faith in every age, not just in ancient Jerusalem. Brueggemann cautions us against the “self-congratulation” that Psalm 84 risks, and warns us that our own tendency to identify the church so closely with the building itself is our own form of idolatry. Seriously: idolatry is not something only ancient or “primitive.” We have plenty of idols today in our own culture, and even in the church itself! However, Brueggemann says that there is help here in the psalm and in the faithful practice of those ancient ancestors, because they kept coming back to God: “the celebration of the Temple regularly points beyond itself to the reality of God, who is the real source of life and the real focus of trust.”
That’s the key, isn’t it? Keeping God at the heart of everything. And yet there is something about the “sacred ground” of the church building: I think of the concept of “sanctuary” as safe haven for those fleeing other powers, something that was perhaps better understood before our own time, and in places far away, places of danger, places where people are hunted down. In the movie Romero, there is a heartbreaking scene where a church is destroyed, and another scene where the Archbishop, Oscar Romero, is shot dead while saying Mass. The awful things–murders, “disappearances,” suppression–that happened in El Salvador were somehow depicted even more compellingly when they occurred on “sacred ground,” as if we expect something better from human beings who enter that space.
Why is the sanctuary of a Temple or a church “sacred ground”? Some would say, with the psalmist, that it’s God’s “dwelling place,” the place where God lives. Brueggemann observes that the Temple as dwelling place wasn’t God’s permanent home but just the “place of God’s sojourning,” a lovely phrase. While they wandered in the wilderness, the Israelites had the ark with them, a mobile experience of God’s presence. But God was also up on that mountain with Moses, and God is with us, up on the mountaintops of our lives, and down in the low places as well. The psalmist remembers the hard part of the journey, in the dry and barren valley of Baca, a place, Joel M. LeMon suggests, that draws its name from the Hebrew word that means “to weep”: it represents, therefore, the kind of “valley of tears” that all of us experience one time or another. But the psalmist reminds us, that even in the wilderness, in the dry places, in the worst of times, God is good and will provide.
As we have said, no place or structure or the whole earth itself can contain God (permanently or temporarily), but we humans need a focus point, a base camp, a reminder, a haven, founded in God’s name. The Temple (or church) may provide that “thin place” that Celtic spirituality describes, a place where the veil between heaven and earth lifts even momentarily and we taste the presence of God, but God is always and everywhere with us. Our very lives, then, are sacred ground, holy ground. Thus, we too can “go from strength to strength” (v. 7), for wherever we are, we are “at home with God.”
Birdsong as counterpoint to our songs of praise
So are the sparrow and the swallow, of course: the psalmist sings of their good fortune in finding a home in the sacred precincts of the Temple. Perhaps there is irony in this location: LeMon writes, for the sweet and delicate little swallows nest with their babies next to the fearsome fire where sacrifices are burnt, and they are safe there under God’s watchful eye. We can’t help recalling Jesus’ own words about God’s eye being on the sparrow, and we wonder at the repeated image of humble sparrows in the Bible, one of the smallest of God’s creatures. Throughout the Bible, we hear that God cares for the ones we might easily overlook: the small ones, the humble ones, the ones on the edges. The swallows and the sparrows, all of creation then, join with humans in a song of praise to God, according to the psalmist–just think of Psalm 104, for instance. LeMon vividly imagines the “continuous birdsongs” in the Temple “[playing] counterpoint to the pilgrims’ hymns.” What a lovely image, for a Temple long ago and the sacred spaces of our lives today, too. Brueggemann expands the metaphor of “nesting” to cover both birds and humans whose worship experience encompasses “serenity, innocence, and trusting delight” in the presence of the God who loves them. Of course, the image of “nest” suggests a place of safety, nurture, and home; do you find a “nest” in other places where you experience being “at home with God”?
Prayers of longing for God’s presence
The scholars provide several other interesting insights: Brueggemann reminds us that the term “God of gods” in verse 7b is not only “a formula for majesty,” but recalls an ancient time of polytheism, during which this God of Israel ruled over all other gods. Brueggemann also observes that this prayer doesn’t ask for the usual list of petitions and requests; it simply expresses the deep “yearning for communion and presence, which are ends in themselves”; this prayer is really not so much about the place (the Temple) as it is about God. When you examine your own prayer life and the worship life of your congregation, do you find prayers of praise, and prayers of longing just to be in the presence of God, to be with God? Finally, Joel LeMon draws our attention to the way that priorities are clarified here: it’s better to be low in status and close to God than high in status but far from God. He seems to be saying that no matter how powerful, how privileged and how well-placed we may seem, the sparrows are much better off than we are. Do you agree? Why or why not?
What does the church building represent to you? Is it your home, or God’s home, or both? What does it mean to gather in prayer, as the assembly of Israel did so long ago, and petition and praise the God who cannot be contained even in the whole universe itself? Why do we do that? Many people found their way to churches and other holy places across our nation (indeed, around the world) in the days following September 11, and pastors felt a particular responsibility to provide a place of prayer for people shaken by world-shattering events. My own pastor left our newly restored sanctuary open all night in our center-city neighborhood, so that “any one who came to Pilgrim Church that night would find a place to pray.” Why did we do that? Why are churches seen as places of sanctuary, where people can find safety? Why are the “ground rules” different there?
For further reflection
Kurt Vonnegut, 20th century
People don’t come to church for preachments, of course, but to daydream about God.
Mahatma Gandhi, 20th century
Prayer is not asking. It is a longing of the soul.
Thomas Merton, 20th century
Just remaining quietly in the presence of God, listening to Him, being attentive to Him, requires a lot of courage and know-how.
Adam S. McHugh, Introverts in the Church: Finding Our Place in an Extroverted Culture, 21st century
When introverts go to church, we crave sanctuary in every sense of the word, as we flee from the disorienting distractions of twenty-first-century life. We desire to escape from superficial relationships, trivial communications and the constant noise that pervade our world, and find rest in the probing depths of God’s love.
Brother Lawrence, 17th century
I cannot imagine how religious persons can live satisfied without the practice of the presence of GOD.
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Weekly Seeds is a service of the Congregational Vitality and Discipleship Ministry Team, Local Church Ministries, United Church of Christ. Bible texts are from the New Revised Standard Version, © 1989 Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved. The Revised Common Lectionary is © 1992 Consultation on Common Texts. Used by permission.