Message
God is with us everywhere, whether we realise it or not,
but there is still value in honouring special places of promise and
revelation.
Sermon
I hope you will understand why, over the coming weeks, my preaching may
be a bit cautious, especially with regard to how it does or
doesn’t touch on the trauma we are presently facing as a
congregation. Normally, I would want to try to make strong connections
between the scripture readings for the day and the events going on in
our lives at the given time, but the level of pain and sensitivity at
present makes that a very unsafe thing to do. I won’t be
pretending that nothing has happened, but I will avoid anything like
today’s gospel reading where every possible direction would be
fraught with unintended implications.
Tonight I want instead to look at the story of Jacob that we heard in
the reading from Genesis. Here too there is a connection we can make,
and I think I can safely make. This story of Jacob’s encounter
with God in a dream comes at a time of trauma for Jacob. Jacob and his
brother Esau have fallen out and Jacob is in fear for his life. And
now, somewhat like us, he doesn’t really know where he is. He is
not in the old place of home, with its comforts and security, but he is
not sure where he is going to end up. He is in the wilderness, a place
that feels threatening, insecure, unknown, and unwelcome.
It is in this place of foreboding that Jacob lies down to sleep, with
nothing but a rock for a pillow, and he has a dream in which God
appears and speaks to him. The dream is best known to us from songs
about Jacob’s ladder, but it is more likely that a ramp or a long
flight of stairs is what is meant. It is something like the long
stairways that go up to the entrance of a temple, only in this dream,
the stairway goes up to heaven itself, and God’s messengers are
seen going up and down between heaven and earth. The focus of the story
is not on the details of this vision though, but on the promises that
God makes to Jacob. God promises to be with Jacob, wherever he goes,
and to bless him and his offspring, and to establish them safely in
this land and bless all peoples through them.
There are two things I want to draw our attention to out of what
happens next. When Jacob awakes from his vision, he says, “Surely
the Lord is in this place and I did not know it!” And so the
first and simplest thing I want to say is that that might be a message
we need to hear in this place too. Surely the Lord is in this place,
this difficult and unwelcome place that we find ourselves in; surely
the Lord is in this place too. Perhaps like Jacob, we feel like this is
a God-forsaken place, a place where we would not expect to meet God,
and yet surely God is here, whether we recognised it or not. Even at
the most God-forsaken moment in history, when Jesus hung dying
painfully on a cross, even there, surely the Lord is in this place.
Even there God was present to work wonders, to turn brokenness into
reconciliation, to turn despair into new hope, to turn the season of
tragedy into the season where new possibilities are born again and life
rises anew. Surely the Lord is in this place, and we did not know it.
There is a second thing I’d like us to think about out of this
too, although it is more general rather than something of special
relevance to us in our present situation. When Jacob arises, he sets up
a rock pillar to mark this place as a sacred place, a place of worship.
We sang a celtic song earlier about the distance between earth and
heaven being tissue thin, and one of the features of Celtic Christian
spirituality is the concept of “thin places”, special
places where earth and heaven seem to touch each other in an unusually
transparent way. Jacob is identifying the place of his vision as a
“thin place”, as the “gate of heaven”.
But there is potentially a tension in this isn’t there? Although
he is identifying this as a special place, God has just promised to be
with him wherever he goes, to be with him in every place. So if God is
with him in every place — God is in this place, but I
didn’t know — then isn’t every place equally special?
Why single out this place as an ongoing special place of worship? Is
there any value in designating a special place when every place is
alive with the presence of God, if we only knew it?
There is no suggestion in the story that Jacob has got his
understanding wrong in setting up the pillar to mark this place as
special, and indeed it becomes and remains special — Bethel is
second only to Jerusalem as a sacred place in the subsequent faith
history of the Hebrew people. So what might we make of this apparent
tension?
I don’t think the passage gives us an answer, but I think it
assumes an answer, so let me try to briefly outline the answer that I
think it assumes.
The answer lies in the concept of God’s promises. God is always
free. God will be wherever God chooses, and God will do whatever God
decides to do. God can freely meet us in any place or situation,
regardless of what we expect or wish for. God is always free to do as
God will. But God also makes promises, promises to meet us in certain
places or to bless us in certain ways or through certain things. And so
certain places or things become special places of God’s presence
or revelation through God’s free action and promise.
And so God is still free to encounter us anywhere, but God has promised
to be present and meet us in this place. God is still free to speak to
us through any writings, but God has promised to be present and to
speak to us when we prayerfully gather to listen to the writings in the
Holy Bible. God is free to reveal his mind to anyone at any time, but
God has promised to be present and to reveal the mind of Christ to us
when we gather to prayerfully listen for the leading of the Holy Spirit
in one another. God is free to meet us and feed us at any table, in any
company, and with any food, but God has promised to meet us and feed us
at this table, in this company, and with this bread and wine.
We can never presume on those promises, as though we can thereby
capture God and have God in our pocket. We cannot force God to say what
we want God to say, just because we can find a verse in the Bible that
might support it. We cannot force God to bless us, just because we
congregate in a place that God has promised to meet us in. God is
always free, and we cannot presumptuously try to bend God’s
promises to our own ends. But if we will walk humbly before our God,
and honour God’s freedom to do as God will and to promise
whatever God likes, then we can find comfort and security within those
promises.
We will be able to both rejoice in the surprise of God being in a place
where we didn’t expect to find God, and graciously surrender
ourselves to God’s transforming presence in the certain places
where God has promised to meet us and lead us into life.