July 7, 2024
Mark 6:1-13Walking with Jesus
Alida Bothman
So Jesus is doing the same things
he’s done in other
places
Same words, same acts of power,
same parables.
Except it’s not working here.
Why? because it’s Jesus home
town.
Jesus went home and the same
stuff
that worked other places didn’t
work at home.
It says:
“And he could do no deed of power there, except that
he laid his hands on a few sick people and cured them.
6And he was amazed at their unbelief.”
Jesus Christ, the son of God, the savior of the world
is confined by the box that
his friends
and family have put him in.
Jesus is being held back by
his past.
Am I the only one in this room that resonates with
this?
We get this.
This is the human side of
Jesus coming through.
We could be the highest power
executive
making a six figure salary
supervising tons of employees,
or the Messiah come to earth,
but to our family and friends
in our hometown
we’re still little Davie or
Timmy or Juney Moon in my case.
It’s nothing new or scandalous or embarrassing
It’s not even theological.
It’s hard to escape our
pasts.
It’s hard to break out of
those molds,
those patterns, those preconceived notions – good or
bad.
Maybe you were always known as the foolish one
or the lazy one, or maybe you
were the smart one,
maybe you were always the
organizer, or the interpreter or the cheer-leader.
And maybe God needs you to do
something else.
The fact is that the past is a strong force in our
lives.
It even prevented Jesus from
doing what he was capable of.
But living the gospel of Jesus in our lives means
change.
It means doing something
different living out something new.
When we come into contact
with Jesus
and with the community of
Christ, we change.
Jesus is constantly renewing
us, constantly challenging us
to think and behave and act
and respond differently
to the world around us.
New Life, resurrection, new beginnings.
That’s what God is all about.
I think this story tells us that change isn’t easy.
There
is resistance from every angle.
It
is easy to snap back to old habits and
not
even Jesus is immune to that reality.
So the first part of the Gospel today is about Jesus
in his hometown
and then the second part is
about Jesus sending out his disciples
into the towns with nothing.
Jesus tells them “take nothing for your journey”
I was kind of stuck for a while trying to figure out
if there was any connection between the two stories, or were they just
next to each other for no
reason.
But now I think they’re related.
I think they’re both about baggage.
Literal and figuratively.
They’re both about carrying
around things
that weigh us down, that
prevent us from
doing what God needs us to do
answering the call of the
gospel
being the people that God
made us to be.
Jesus said to the disciples,
“Just
carry one staff, no bread,
one pair of sandals and one
set
of clothes. No baggage.”
No bring your past, don’t bring your possessions,
don’t
bring the things that make you feel
either
powerful or powerless.
Go into God’s service free of
those things.
When those disciples were sent out.
Without anything, they
couldn’t rely on their
possessions, they couldn’t use
them to
look better than anyone or
impress anyone.
They couldn’t use them for
security.
But neither could they be
weighed down by any of it.
They had to go into each town as beggars.
Meaning when people
approached them,
they didn’t have to worry
about losing
their cloaks, their bread, or
the money in their belts.
So every person they met was
an opportunity, not a threat.
God can use us best when we’re
Not preoccupied with what
we’re going to lose.
In God’s eyes, we are not our wealth or our privilege,
or our possessions or our
lack of possessions.
We are not our downfalls or
our short comings.
We are not even our
accomplishments.
We are washed clean of all
that.
With God’s forgiveness, every
day is
a new day and a new
possibility and a new beginning.
Our baggage does not lift us
up, or weigh us down.
In the earliest Christian
Church, people were
drawn to the new religion by
the way Christians
treated each other as equals.
How they were not
divided by wealth or status,
they were the same:
Men, women, Jews and Greek,
slave and free.
And because it was a new
thing, they didn’t
rely on the past, and they
weren’t weighed down by it.
As we move forward as followers of Jesus in this
church,
We come to God with our hands
empty.
We should not be relying on
our past privilege or accomplishments.
And we should not be weighed
down by our past failures.
We should not worry about how
we did it before,
or how we failed to do it
before.
We come to each moment, with
our hands out and accepting
not worried about losing
anything,
Every moment, every new
person, every ministry,
every encounter we have with
each other,
is an opportunity to grow in
love and service.
And if something doesn’t work,
We can just shake the dust
off our feet
and move on again.
In our baptism, all the dust was shaken off us.
And every day, the water of
our baptism
shakes the dust of our past
off,
all our baggage gets washed
away.
Each day God allows you and me the possibility
to start with a clean slate.
That is the forgiveness of
God.
Our baggage does not govern us,. and it does not help
us.
To God, we are not what we
carry.
We are only a wonderful, possible future.
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