Sunday, August 9, 2020

Silence in the Heart of God (Proper 14A)

 

Stillness in the Heart of God

Proper 14A 

Homily delivered at

Trinity Parish Church, Ashland OR

By the Rev. Fr. Tony Hutchinson, SCP, Ph.D.

8 a.m. Said Mass on the Labyrinth;

10 a.m. Said Mass with sung antiphons live-streamed from the Chancel

1 Kings 19:9-18; Psalm 85:8-13; Romans 10:5-15; Matthew 14:22-33

 

God, take away our hearts of stone and give us hearts of flesh.  Amen

 

One of my favorite Bible stories as a boy was the story in 1 Kings 18 about Elijah’s conflict with Ba’al worshipers. He challenges Ba’al’s priests to a great “Who hears our prayers?” contest on Mount Carmel.   He dares them to go face to face with him and build competing altars:  whichever God sends fire from heaven and consumes the sacrifice, he is the true God.  The Ba’al worshippers, favorites of King, Queen, and all the rich and powerful, build theirs, put all sorts of dry tinder around it, and begin praying.  Their noisy, self-flagellating prayers lead to mere silence.  “Is your God sleeping?” taunts Elijah, “or perhaps gone to the restroom?”  The priests of Ba’al pray all the louder: again, nothing.  Then Elijah builds his altar, sacrifices a bull, and even pours water all over the wood. He prays, “Show ‘em what’s what, Lord!”  His prayer is immediately answered by a flash of lightning and fire from heaven that consumes his sacrifice.  Elijah wins, and the outraged crowd of spectators chase and kill the priests of Ba’al. 

 

I think I liked the story so much because it was dramatic, at points funny, and had all the color of a Hollywood Western.  Elijah beats the priests of Ba’al just like Sherriff Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday beat the Clantons and McLauries at the O.K. Corral.  Law prevails; the bullies are defeated.  Heady stuff for an 8 year old boy.  

 

It was only later, when I was 10 or so, that I learned the sequel to the Mt. Carmel story, today’s Hebrew Scriptures lesson.  And I was an adult before I learned that unlike in the film, the OK Corral did not solve anything, but only deepened and enraged the conflict in Tombstone.  

 

In the Elijah story, Ahab and Jezebel retaliate for the murder of their priests, sending soldiers to massacre the prophets of YHWH, and Elijah flees for his life.  He hides in a cave on Mt. Horeb or Sinai, where Moses had received the Law.   And there, in one last great epiphany before he prepares to end his ministry and turn it over to Elisha, he learns that maybe he had misunderstood things on Mt. Carmel. 

 

Archaeological digs have turned up dozens of small representations of Ba’al and his bedmate Asherah, as well as texts with prayers and liturgies from the Ba’al cult.  The picture we get from these looks strangely contemporary and familiar. Ba’al was a god of wealth, power, and pleasure.  He was seen as backing the winners and abandoning losers.  With Ba’al on your side, you could treat subordinates with impunity, cheat those with whom you did business, take advantage of the poor and downtrodden, treat the objects of your sexual desire as mere things to be graded and scored, use bullying and force to have your way with others, with conspicuous consumption as a sign of your social rank bestowed by the gods.  You could enjoy unjust privilege with impunity and not a whiff of shame or guilt.  Ba’al devotees were “quality,” winners,” and the “best, smartest, and strongest” of all.  Ba’al is described as a thrower of lightning and thunder, an earth shaker, and source of all great wealth.  For his enemies, he sent woes such as whirlwinds and wild fires.  His name, Ba’al, means “master” or “husband,” and so he was often confused and conflated with YHWH, whose regular use name was Adonai, or “Lord” or “master.” 

 

In contrast, YHWH is the God of all, not just the powerful.  YHWH takes care of the widow and orphan, the alien and sojourner, and raises the poor from the ashes.   YHWH was seen as the source of blessing and prosperity as well as woe, but this was not based on partisanship or tribe.  Things that displease YHWH included oppressing the poor, cheating, dissembling, and lying, and malice against the powerless.  YHWH demanded trust and ethical behavior from his people, and ethics meant first and foremost fairness, honesty, compassion, and integrity.  And these things were constraints upon how one enjoyed the blessings, how one took one’s pleasure.     

 

Elijah does not want anyone to confuse Canaan’s petty fertility fetish, enabler of powerful, rich, and lustful men, with the Holy One of Israel, who demands justice and compassion from all.  His name means YHWH is my God. 

 

On Mt. Carmel, Elijah dares his opponents to a contest to see who is the true giver of blessing—YHWH or Ba’al.  The flash, fire, and fury vindicates Elijah and he massacres the priests of Ba’al.  But perhaps as satisfying as this story is as a Western, it does not end here.  Elijah’s opponents, the ones with power and might they say were bestowed by Ba’al, turn the tables.  Elijah learns, as Jesus later teaches, that those who live by the sword die by the sword.   Apparently, all that fury and fire on Carmel didn’t really give Elijah what he needed to defeat the great bully god. 

 

The text in Hebrew of this story is subtle in its use of verbal forms, and when you render these in English it becomes clear that the point of this story is YHWH and Ba’al are not at all alike.

 

“A strong and heavy wind was rending the mountains and crushing the rocks, before Yahweh, but Yahweh was no longer in the whirlwind.  Then an earthquake, but Yahweh was no longer in the earthquake.  And then a fire, but God was no longer in the fire.  Finally, there was a still breeze, and the sound of sheer silence.  And when Elijah heard this, “he hid his face in his cloak” because he knew Yahweh was now present. 

 

The power and love of God are not found in God’s ability to give us what we want.  God is not a supporter of privilege and abuse of the down-trodden.  God is not in the flash, the fire, and fury.  We sully God by putting God on par with the petty idols of all those about us. 

 

“God blesses us materially because we do what’s right; the poor and marginalized deserve their lot because they have not—this is the great heresy of the “Prosperity Gospel” taught in many of America’s evangelical churches today.  It is the great error behind white supremacy, the doctrine of discovery and disinheriting first nations, and patriarchy.  It is, quite simply, Ba’al worship, idolatry.  

 

God, however, is in utter silence, not the sound and fury.  Listening to silence, contemplating quietness, waiting for subtlety—these are the hallmarks of a life devoted to pursuit of the spirit.  Noise and flash might on occasion happen, but usually God speaks to us in the silence of our stumbling hearts, seeking coherent expression and understanding, in what the King James Bible calls “the still, small voice.” 

 

St. Mother Teresa of Calcutta said, “In the silence of the heart God speaks. If you face God in prayer and silence, God will speak to you…  Souls of prayer are souls of great silence.”

Today’s Epistle says the justice that comes from trusting God is not far away, high in the heaven or low in the abyss, but is at hand, in our very heart.  Today’s Gospel says the flash and awe of seeing Jesus walking on the stormy sea are not enough to keep us on top of the waves: they do not drive out the fear that sinks Peter.  To walk, we must fully trust Jesus.  Trust comes in moments of silent reflection, not in noise and fury. 

 

May we learn to sit in silence.  May we learn in that silence to hear the voice of the God who is love itself.  May we cast away our idols and Ba’als with their flash and fury.  Amen. 

 

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