This week, I remembered a sermon I listened to a few years back. The preacher talked about hiking in the redwoods of California with his wife. It was a peaceful experience; it felt like nothing else mattered but just being there in that moment.
When it was time to leave, they got in their car to drive home. They turned on the radio and heard the news of the day: a mass shooting. War in Ukraine. Leaks about Supreme Court decisions. Toxic politics in primaries of one state after another. And just like that, their peace was gone.
As soon as they reentered the world, their peace evaporated, and they wondered if what they had been feeling was really peace at all. Or maybe just an illusion.
Do you ever feel that way? That the only way to find a moment of peace is to escape from the world we live in?
In the gospel of Luke, we are in a section in which, as Luke tells us, Jesus has set his face toward Jerusalem. We know what this meant for him – in Jerusalem was his death, so this means he was beginning to look beyond this world. This seemed to be a bit off-putting for some people, but for Jesus it was essential. He needed to set his face toward Jerusalem.
To prepare his disciples, he began sending them out on their own, to try their hand at ministry. First, he sent out the 12 who were closest to him, his inner circle. Their mission was to proclaim the kingdom of God and to heal. Later, in this passage, he sends out a much larger group to go in pairs to all the places he, himself, intends to visit. He sends them with instructions to bring peace with them and virtually nothing else – no purse, no bag, no sandals. Just peace. And healing. And the message that the kingdom of God has come near.
The kingdom of God is near. And just as it was a bit off-putting for some of the people Jesus approached, it probably had the same effect on some towns and villages the disciples entered.
Jesus gave them instructions about what to do when their message was rejected. I suppose that some people didn’t understand what the kingdom of God had to do with the world in which they lived.
I don’t blame them. Sometimes, it can seem like the peace of Christ is just a temporary escape from the world in which we live.
I suppose the fact that we find the world’s problems challenging is nothing new. I know that there have always been hard times, but it does seem hard these days to find our equilibrium.
I have been reading the work of a German sociologist, Hartmut Rosa, who offers some intriguing thoughts about all this. His book is called The Uncontrollability of the World – a good title, I think. Modern people have a tendency to believe that we can control the world, but, alas, the world stubbornly remains beyond our control.
Rosa has put a name to something we experience now in our lives: the contraction of the present. The length of time in which our past experience can reliably predict our future is shrinking. Change comes faster than ever before, meaning that our ability to feel comfortable in our knowledge of how things work, how things will go, is shrinking. We feel more unsure about everything. We grow more distrustful of institutions. The ground beneath our feet is shifting.
And we react by getting angry. I spoke to you last week about anger as something that can be useful, but only if we also have the courage to do something about it. Anger by itself is just letting off steam, and if you turn on the TV, it seems like everyone is doing a lot of that. It almost doesn’t even matter what you choose to listen to, what news source you decide is reliable. They are all angry. And we get angry too.
There is not much that happens these days where you don’t feel like you have to pick a side. Take a position for or against, and if you’re against it then you’re angry about it. We feed our anger every day.
And, instead of supporting one another as we go through a hardship together, we attack one another. We distrust one another. We distrust our institutions. Conspiracy theories, accusations, and attacks are constantly in the air. It feels like our whole system is broken. And there is no peace.
But, that preacher I was listening to, who talked about the peace he found in the woods, then quickly lost? He said that he thinks true peace is a whole lot more than just the nice feeling you get when you’re not fighting with anyone; true peace is the presence of real justice. And it seems like justice is in short supply in our world.
There are so many kinds of injustice, which are all interconnected. Martin Luther King said that injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere; that we are all caught in an inescapable network of mutuality. That is to say, we are all in this together. If we try to separate ourselves from the needs of the world, we do harm to ourselves as much as to the needy. Justice is complicated. The need is overwhelming.
And so, this preacher said, when we feel overwhelmed we sometimes just decide to pull back. We feel inadequate to the task. Let someone else, someone better equipped, try. And when we pull back, we leave a vacuum that will be filled by more injustice, more hate, more violence. The answer, this preacher said, is for each of us to take back our moral autonomy and be a force for what is right, for justice. And this is where we may find that ever-elusive peace.
It was an inspiring sermon. This was not a Presbyterian preacher, though. This was not a preacher from any church, actually, or even any other religion. This was a sermon delivered at a gathering called Civic Saturday, where you find people who maybe have no desire to be a part of religion, but they still have a very human hunger for meaning. For meaning that is found in community. They come together for the mutual support of one another, for healing, for inspiration, and then they go out into the world and try to make a difference.
They are a lot like church – without Jesus. But there may be another important difference: They might have a greater sense of urgency about bringing peace to this world – what we as Christians would call the kingdom of God. They may or may not believe there is something to look forward to after this; regardless, though, they are looking for that kind of peace and love right here in this world.
I don’t know if Civic Saturday gatherings are still going on – I hope they thrive and continue to serve this nation well.
But I also need the church to say loud and clear, “The kingdom of God is near.” And to do our very best to bridge the gap between this world and God’s kingdom, to make the kingdom more visible in this world.
I cannot think of a time when our nation has been more needful of Christians who will do this: bring healing, bring justice, bring peace.
I once asked a group of church people how they felt about the notion of being sent out into the world as Jesus sent out the 70 disciples. They all said they felt inadequate. And it’s true, we are inadequate. We are easily overwhelmed with the needs as we see them – the fighting, the toxic politics, the gross inequality, the ways we see our civic norms breaking down and raw power taking their place. It’s enough to make you withdraw into your prayer closet.
But let us remember that Jesus sent his disciples out. He sent them with instructions to heal. He sent them with peace to share. He sent them with a little bit of the kingdom of heaven, which was more than adequate.
This weekend we celebrate the 250th birthday of our nation. It was 250 years ago that the Declaration of Independence was signed. I don’t know if you have read it lately, but it is worth taking a look at.
When you read the document, you notice the sense of unity in it. The people of the original colonies are spoken of as “one people.” The idea of forming a new nation carried the clear sense of being united in purpose, even though they were quite different in other ways. The closing words of the document are: “for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor.”
Two hundred fifty years later, we feel a bit of sadness that there is so much hostility between us. We are disappointed at the fact that we cannot really be united in our celebrations, because of how polarized our politics have grown.
Some might believe the solution is to become a Christian nation – to make our laws explicitly Christian. Inevitably, that would be one particular flavor of Christian – something that not even all Christians could agree on.
The best path for our nation is not to impose a set of religious laws for everyone, because our nation was created to ensure freedom of religion for all people. But the best path for us, as followers of Christ, is to do what he asked his disciples to do: send peace, everywhere we go. Be a little bit of the kingdom of heaven. Let them know that the kingdom has come near to them, carrying peace.
In the midst of a world that is struggling, a nation sometimes overwhelmed by fear and distrust and polarization, may we know that the kingdom of heaven is not for some time later. It is not for our escape. The kingdom of heaven is for here and now, and it is given to us.
When you are overwhelmed, remember this: the kingdom of heaven is here.
May we share it.
All thanks and glory be to our God. Amen.







