Out to Serve: A Newman Church Podcast
Sxripture: 1 Kings 19:3–13 [https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Kings%2019%3A3-13&version=NIV] As I mentioned in today’s welcome, today is All Souls’ Day, sometimes also called in a celebratory way the Day of the Dead. It is a day of intentional celebration, in the face of the uncomfortability of loss — this is a way we invite God into the cracks and wounds and heartaches of our lives, by setting time aside to embrace celebration and discomfort together. In 2010, I lived in New Orleans for a few months. Having spent my whole life up to that point in New England, New Orleans was a whole new world. Different music, different weather, different art, different traditions. And because it was only five years after the destruction of Hurricane Katrina, a whole new world was being assembled and reconstructed in New Orleans — yet the uncomfortable signs and symbols of loss and death were everywhere. There were the spraypainted circles still on many houses that indicated that the house had been checked after the storm and what had been found there. There were hospitals and high-rise buildings that had not been part of the recovery and sat there crumbling with trees growing out of the windows. One of the things I discovered by accident by walking around the city was the fact that the street artist Banksy — one of the most famous artists of the twenty-first century — had traveled to New Orleans only a few years after Katrina — and in the altered cityscape he had created fifteen or so pieces of graffiti art in the midst of abandoned buildings and ongoing rebuilding. One Banksy piece depicted a young girl looking up to discover that her umbrella above her head was the source of a downpour, drawing attention to the failed effort to protect people during the hurricane. Another showed a boy using an orange life-preserver as a swing. Another showed looters in uniform taking televisions out of a building. Banksy and other local artists bringing a source of creative joy and critical commentary into a places of loss was a transformative act. We know this type of story from the Gospel tradition too. The power of Jesus was the power of his healing spectacle in a time of suffering. The more he healed and helped, the more people who followed him; the more people he revitalized to new life, the more people believed in his positive impact; the more people who were fed by him, the more people who went forth to feed others. There is a growing sense in the Gospel story of Jesus that he is something that people increasingly want to be a part of it. The same can be said of the prophet Elijah at the beginning of this morning’s scripture reading. He is coming off an amazing spectacle where he had triumphed over the followers of a rival God to YHWH, proving in many ways that YHWH was a God one would want to be a part of — YHWH was a source of strength and direction. So why, we might wonder, is this reading about Elijah’s suffering and sadness? This is a familiar story in scripture — it begins with Elijah fearing for his life — think of Moses fleeing Egypt when he finds out people know he murdered an Egyptian; think of Mary and Jospeh with Jesus fleeing Bethlehem when they find out Herod has ordered the death of newborns; think of Jacob fleeing from his enraged brother Esau. We already know this story of Elijah in some sense, from its familiarity in scripture — it embodies the fact that life can be fragile and uncertain. Elijah experiences desolation — the dark night of the soul. In the desert, underneath the broom tree, he asks God to, quote, “take away his life.” One commentator says, Elijah “is utterly at the end of his own courage.” In a sense, this reading about Elijah is a story of aftermath. Like, if they made a Marvel Superhero sequel movie about everyone having to clean up and process the mess everyone made in the previous movie. This movie about Elijah would follow the superhero from the heights of his achievement into the quiet context of his recovery and doubt about what he has done. In this superhero story, Elijah has been a superhero for God, and after his big show, his big battle, his big success — he has just lost his nerve. He has fled south seeking safety, goes as far as the last settlements, and then goes a day farther into the desert. This is a world where YHWH’s rule is more immediate and powerful than the rule of the Kings. In a book of Kings, the monarchs look foolish and ineffective — their decisions end in absurdity and chaos, whereas God in the story is powerful even when just showing up as a small voice. This voice of God is just enough to nourish the prophet Elijah, to resuscitate his resolve, to make him the focus of the story as opposed to the stories of the Queens and Kings. Sometimes a spectacle is what we need to get through something difficult: Jesus’s ministry was a spectacle; Banksy’s art in New Orleans was a spectacle; I even remember when my father was in active ministry, he once preached a sermon while doing a head-stand — I don’t remember what the sermon was about or why he was standing on his head, but I will never forget the event. But God in scripture is not a spectacle. God sometimes calls prophets like Elijah to make a splash and grab the people’s attention. But more often than not, God shows up in our quiet vulnerability. This reading ends today: A great and powerful wind tore the mountains apart, but God was not in the wind. An earthquake shatters the earth, but God was not in the earthquake; Likewise God was not in the fire. But God was in the strange small whisper that Elijah heard and inspired him to keep going. Friends, in this season of monumental happenings, in this season when we remember the losses we have experienced, help us to look beyond the spectacle to find God abiding with us in the quiet beyond the active world. In this way we’ll take part in the dance of God’s creation from death, back into life. May it be so. Amen. © 2025 Newman Church. All Rights Reserved. ---------------------------------------- Questions or comments? Contact us: Submit a form. [https://out2serve.org/2025/11/03/god-is-still-speaking/]
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