Sermon by Fr James Heard, Sunday 20 August, United Benefice of Holland Park, Trinity 10 with Sacrament of Healing
Sermon by Fr James Heard, Sunday 20 August, United Benefice of Holland Park, Trinity 10 with Sacrament of Healing
In 1968, Jane Elliott conducted a famous experiment in an
Iowa classroom. It was inspired by the assassination of Dr Martin Luther King
and the inspirational life that he led. The year three teacher developed an
exercise to help her white students understand the effects of racism and
prejudice.
Elliott divided her class into two separate groups:
blue-eyed students and brown-eyed students. On the first day, she labelled the
blue-eyed group as the superior group and from that point forward they had
extra privileges, leaving the brown-eyed children to represent the minority
group.
She discouraged the groups from interacting and singled
out individual students to stress the negative characteristics of the children
in the minority group.
What this exercise showed was that the children’s
behaviour changed almost instantaneously. The group of blue-eyed students
performed better academically and even began bullying their brown-eyed
classmates. The brown-eyed group experienced lower self-confidence and worse
academic performance. The next day, she reversed the roles of the two groups
and the blue-eyed students became the minority group.
At the end of the experiment, the children were so
relieved that they embraced one another and agreed that people shouldn’t be
judged based on outward appearances. It’s an exercise that has since been
repeated many times with similar outcomes.
It addresses one of
the most significant problems facing our world today: how do we relate to those
who are other? How do we respond to those who are not like us? The Tutsis and
Hutu of Rwanda; Jew and Palestinian; Turks living in Germany, Gypsies in Italy,
the half a million illegal aliens living in Britain. And we’ve witnessed it
this week in the United States with neo-Nazis, which has reminded us of the
most extreme example otherness in the experience of the Holocaust. Various
kinds of religious, social, ethnic and cultural cleansings force us to think
hard about the social reality of otherness.
And that’s what the readings today are about. Isaiah
speaks of the day when the foreigner will come to worship the Lord: ‘for my
house shall be called a house of prayer for all peoples’. The early primitive
way of being community for the Jewish people, pre-exile, included a vision an
exclusive community of purity. And some wanted this to continue after the
return from Babylonian exile in the late sixth century. Yet the visionary
passage from the poet Isaiah radically and deliberately flies in the face of
the old Torah provisions (Brueggemann p.170). This is an extraordinary piece of
hermeneutical revision.
The few verses that our lectionary misses out describe
the inclusion of eunuchs. The Torah, the old law, very clearly (and rather
graphically) excludes such persons in Deuteronomy 23.1 [Just to warn you, men,
these are difficult words to hear read out!]: ‘No one whose testicles and
crushed or whose penis is cut off shall be admitted to the assembly of the
Lord’.
Such persons were without hope and without a future in
Israel. Yet Isaiah overrides this, and he widens the circle, he widens the
boundaries of who can be included. God’s vision, expressed through Isaiah,
includes eunuchs and it includes foreigners. Both are welcomed into the full
life of the worshipping community.
This is a fascinating example of the way Isaiah
handles pervious sacred writings: he doesn’t treat them as set in stone, rigid
and unchangeable. Rather, he treats previous sacred writings with flexibility,
or malleability, and it includes a willingness to challenge previous ways of
thinking.
Then we come to today’s Gospel reading and Jesus’
encounter with an unnamed woman from Canaan, or modern Lebanon. She was from a
region that exploited Galilean farmers, and the Canaanites were Israel’s old
enemy. And through this encounter, Jesus himself is challenged to expand his
mission to include Gentiles.
At first Jesus refuses to help because he has only
been sent to ‘the lost sheep of Israel’ (Matt 15.24). This is the only time in
the Gospels where Jesus ignores a person who approaches him in need. And it
seems incredibly rude.
Jesus’ second response is even more shocking. ‘It is
not fair to take the children’s food and throw it to the dogs.’ The children
are clearly the people of Israel, and the dogs are the Gentiles, the non-Jew,
those on the outside. Even so, the woman persists, saying that even dogs get a
few crumbs that fall from the masters’ table. Jesus is challenged: Is there no
mercy for the outsider, the other, in Jesus’ kingdom? Jesus is amazed at the
woman’s faith. And through the encounter, Jesus’ own understanding of his
mission was enlarged; he saw the key concept of his message – unbiased grace –
in a new light (Volf 1996:214).
This episode is a turning point in the Gospel of
Matthew. The Gospel is written to a largely Jewish community, and they were
coming to terms with their own identity and the limits of their mission.
‘Matthew’s community journeys from silent separation from the Gentiles, to
conflictual encounters, to embracing an active mission to include them, as
reflected in the Great Commission at the end of the Gospel: “Go therefore and
make disciples of all nations”’ (Barbara Reid, The Lectionary Commentary,
p.93).
The faith of Jesus Christ – who opened his arms wide
upon the cross, so embracing all humanity – this faith also frees us from
pursuing our interests only. This faith inspires and creates within us, a space
for the interests of others. This is salvation indeed: Turning from our ego and
our self-interest, and from simply sustaining our tribe, in a journey that
joins in Jesus’ embrace of the world in radical inclusivity.
It starts with a step of faith, just as it did for the
Canaanite woman. As we make that journey, we allow the walls that surround our
hearts, our lives, our church, to be broken down, and to embrace those in
distress, to welcome those who are isolated.
It is a journey that comes with a health warning: a
comfortable journey is not guaranteed. The journey doesn’t mean becoming the
same… difference, diversity, is good and healthy. As we walk in the footsteps
of Christ, we become a channel of healing and love to those who are other,
because ultimately, we are all God’s children.
‘For my house shall be called a house of prayer for
all peoples.’
Reference:
Volf, Miroslav. (1996). Exclusion and Embrace: A Theological
Exploration of Identity, Otherness, and Reconciliation. Nashville:
Abingdon.