Friday, 27 February 2015

A Lent Course part 2 - pondering outsiders


Isaiah 10:1-2  “Ah, you who make iniquitous decrees, who write
oppressive statutes, to turn aside the needy from justice and to rob the poor of my people of their right, that widows may be your spoil, and that you may make the orphans your prey!
Amos 2:6-7 “For three transgressions of Israel, and for four, I will not revoke the punishment; because they sell the righteous for silver, and the needy for a pair of sandals - they who trample the head of the poor into the dust of the earth, and push the afflicted out of the way.”

What does it mean when people are pushed outside? 

There are words of warning to the nation of Israel. They have failed to observe the laws of the Covenant, and it is this, rather than their spiritual worship, with which God is concerned. This should not surprise us, because God has expressed this as a priority from the outset of their life and worship together.
 Notice that both passages here are addressed to two key sectors in society – those who make and shape political policy, and those who are engaged in the world of business. God speaks out against those
who make laws and organise business in a way that oppresses the poor.
What do you think Isaiah and Amos would say to our world today? As Could we write a similar ‘oracle’ and use it as an act of prayer later?

Share experiences of being “outside” – perhaps perceived as different. How does it feel to be outside a group? Dozing on Monday watching 50’s drama about a WPC out of college first day at work in a man’s world – reduced to making the tea and filing. How does it feel to be at the hands of another? Poor? Ill? Bereaved? Homeless? In poverty? And where is God in those moments and what perception do you have of the Church?

When we lived in Storrington, my now ex wife Claire who was an Anglican, used to go into Brighton to find some younger people in church. Average age of Anglicans in our village was about 90. She used to come home and tell stories of people who came into the city centre church and I remember one well. A drunk, homeless, smelly man came into the church during communion while the priest was in full flow and he started shouting at the back. “You haven’t got a clue, you haven’t got an f****ing clue.” For him, the Church was another world, isolated from his suffering.

Want in this session to use some of Tutu’s quotes about a God who comes to the outsider, do a little bit of liberation theology, do some study of the prophet Amos, and I also want to look at some of the document some of the C of E Bishops wrote to the politicians about faith issues prior to the General Election. I have the full document if you would like me to send it to you.

A study of some of Amos will help us here:
1.      What does Amos say about the selfish life in Israel of the rich? (6: 4 – 6) Why did he condemn these things?
2.      The law court was held in the open air in the wide space just inside the city gate. It was called “in the gate.” What does Amos say about the court and what was wrong with it? (2:6 – 7; 5: 10 – 13)
3.      What does Amos say about cheating in the markets (8: 4 – 6)
4.      What does Amos say about the religion of the people? (5: 21 – 24) Why should he condemn the people when they went to the Temple and offered their sacrifices regularly?

Some things to ponder:
1.      Does Amos teach us anything about all of us having a responsibility to speak out God’s word today? Do people accept easily the words of an “outsider”?
2.      Has God ever called you to do something outrageous?
3.      Has God an uncomfortable word for today? Read 7: 7 to 8: 2 – false optimism – building expansion and abundant harvests were thought to be God’s signs of approval – but the optimism ignored the plight of the masses who didn’t benefit from such plenty and building. God will never again pass by, never again just not notice. Disaster predicted!

HOWEVER!
The place of hope in Amos
Read 5: 14 – 15 and 9: 11 – 15
Most of the book has a picture of an inflexible God who has demanded righteousness and expects righteousness, and speaks to people who should know better!
In chapter 5, though, there are hints of a possible way out for some – seek good….and you will live, etc.  
In chapter 9: 11 – 15, some hope – some see this an addition – as Northern Kingdom was taken into exile in 722 by the Assyrians and lost its identity, but others think Amos is here painting a long term picture – doesn’t he seem to saying there is still a chance to seek the Lord? God, long term, is coming to assert his reign, and Amos felt it was worth preaching passionately to save some people for a new society.
Note though – it is not unconditional hope – subordinate to the exhortations of Amos, to seek God and live etc, their fulfilment depends on obedience to them. Amos then sets the salvation that Israel took for granted under the condition of the reform of her life in the light of the covenant – very important. Note in our words – theme of return.

A quote – atheist philosopher Nietzsche:
“Show me you are redeemed, and I will believe in your redeemer.”

Then let’s pick up some of Tutu’s quotes about being outside:

 “The prophets were seething in their condemnation, especially of the ostentatious religious celebrations which went hand in glove with a disregard for the welfare of the poor, the hungry, the marginalised, all who were the flotsam and jetsam of their societies. They had no one to speak up for them, and it was God who took up the cudgels on their behalf. You can imagine the impact of this on people used to being treated like scum.”
Where there is need, God can’t help stepping in on the side of those who are suffering.”
How do you react to these quotes? Where does the church speak up for those outside, or doesn’t it? Is God “on the side of the poor?”
Does the church stand up against injustice? Tutu tells the story of David and Nathan and Nathan’s role to put him right about injustice.

The Person in Community: part of a letter written pre the election by some C of E bishops
Our hope for a stronger politics of community is driven by the conviction, founded on experience and evidence, that individuals flourish best when they belong with confidence to networks of relationships, institutions and communities which extend well beyond the nuclear family but stop well short of the state or the corporation.
We are most human when we know ourselves to be dependent on others. That is something we first learn in families, if we are fortunate enough to experience the blessings of family life. And families are not only for children. They are also about making old age creative and happy. Nor are families completely self-contained units. They flourish best when there are networks of friendship, neighbourliness and mutual support around them.
 Our society celebrates the autonomy of individuals but does too little to acknowledge that dependency on others is what makes human beings social creatures.
Paradoxically, too much stress on the individual, and on the supposedly autonomous choices of the individual-as-consumer, has tended to diminish rather than enhance the moral significance of each unique person. It has led us to undervalue individuals who exhibit weakness, are dependent on others, or who try to live selflessly. When individuality is thought to stem from autonomy and freedom of choice, a particular image of the ideal individual – young, free, attractive, and materially comfortable – becomes the archetype against which everyone is measured and most are found wanting.

Most people, when asked, subscribe to some version of the idea that all people are created equal. Yet this is contradicted in the way that some categories of people are spoken about – people who are sick, disabled, terminally ill or otherwise unable to live the life that a consumer society celebrates; people who are unable to work, materially poor or mentally ill in ways which challenge “acceptable” ways of being unwell.
There is a deep contradiction in the attitudes of a society which celebrates equality in principle yet treats some people, especially the poor and vulnerable, as unwanted, unvalued and unnoticed. It is particularly counter-productive to denigrate those who are in need, because this undermines the wider social instinct to support one another in the community. For instance, when those who rely on social security payments are all described in terms that imply they are undeserving, dependent, and ought to be self-sufficient, it deters others from offering the informal, neighbourly support which could ease some of the burden of welfare on the state.
This is why it is important to move away from the focus on the individual to a richer narrative of the person in community.

Discuss!

What does it mean in practice to be outside? Do we as Christians need to live outside for a while to understand outside?
I was on North Dulwich station last night. I met a young woman who was shouting at the machine as they have away with real people because the machine had eaten her last money and she couldn’t renew her Oyster card and she started shouting at the machine saying it was the last straw for her. I bought her a ticket. We had a long conversation about being on benefit and what that means for her and her family. She told me what she would like to do to Mr Cameron. I suggested to her that going out to vote in May might be a better option that what she wanted to do. But she has a struggle every day, and she told me she doesn’t smoke or drink or go out, all of life is looking after her daughter and making ends meet.
How do we minister to the outside if we never go outside?

“It is only in some form of actual solidarity with the outsiders/sinners/little ones that we fully get the message of the Gospel. It is only then that we understand our own poor soul and its neediness.” Richard Rohr - Scripture as Liberation

Finally consider what it means for you that Jesus was crucified “outside a city wall” on a rubbish heap?


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