Dancing
to a Different Tune
Texts: Isaiah 2:1-5; Revelation 22:1-5
(Gary W. Charles, Cove Presbyterian Church, Covesville, VA,
11-27-2016)
I will never sing, “O Little Town of Bethlehem”
the same way. Our Palestine-Israel travel group had just passed through one of
the 630 checkpoints in the Occupied Palestinian Territory to enter the little
town of Bethlehem. Once we had crossed over to the Palestinian side of the
Wall, the bus stopped abruptly. Our guide invited us to stand aside the Separation
Wall, three times the height of the Berlin Wall. Covered with graffiti, mostly
done at night, the Wall was well guarded by Israeli soldiers in a nearby turret
armed with uzzis. “The hopes and fears of all the years are met in Thee
tonight” is a chorus from the carol that ran through my mind standing next to
that Bethlehem wall and it has haunted me ever since.
I was
standing in line at a Stuckey’s, a convenience and eating establishment on the
main corridor of the Eastern Shore. I was working for the Virginia Council of
Churches in their migrant ministry on summer during college. My job began at
sunset when the migrants returned to the camp across the street from Stuckey’s,
exhausted from a long day harvesting cucumbers, tomatoes, and squash.
The father and son ahead of me in line at
Stuckey’s were looking across the street at the wooden shacks in disrepair that
serve as seasonal homes for the migrants. The son asked the father, “What are
those?” The father answered without missing a beat, “Tobacco barns.” The
migrants were essential to the economy of the Eastern Shore but invisible to most
people who lived there. They still are and not just on American farms, but along
the U.S.-Mexico border, at the borders of Hungary and Germany, on the Sudan and
South Sudan, and wherever children, women, and men are forced to flee from home
for safety or for economic survival.
Amid all the recent hardline conversation about
refugees, internationally and nationally, I have been reminded at how
romantically Christians often observe the birth of Jesus, forgetting that in
his birth story, Jesus is himself a refugee. As Matthew tells the story, after
the holy family was turned away from the Inn, they were chased from Bethlehem
to Egypt; they had no place to call home. In a new hymn by Tom Troeger, we hear
the haunting truth of a Savior become Refugee: “The winter wind that storms the
barn where Mary holds her child portends the coming brutal harm of Herod’s rage
run wild” (from “The Winter Wind that Storms the Barn” by Tom Troeger and music
by John R. Kleinheksel).
We live in a nation and a world of immigrants
and yet we live in a nation and world running scared not only of immigrants and
refugees but of everything and everyone from Palestinians to Planned Parenthood
to ISIS to the drug trade to declining churches, even to vaccines. When I am
scared, I do not think clearly. I react first and think and pray second. When I
am with a group of scared people, I find that our language gets extreme and our
positions calcify and if not physical, emotional walls are built.
It was to such a community of scared people
that Isaiah wrote and generations later, the refugee, John of Patmos, would
write. If any two people had good reason to run scared it was Isaiah writing
hundreds of years before the birth of Jesus and John of Patmos writing a couple
of generations after the death of Jesus.
The first thirty-nine chapters of Isaiah read
like a wild man with multi-colored hair running down the street, holding a huge
placard, screaming, “The end of the world is at hand.” No one took him
seriously, but he was the only sane one in the crowd. Isaiah announced that a
time of destruction and deportation of his people was coming and everyone
scoffed. And yet, this same mad town crier inserted an amazing picture of what God
would bring to pass after the dark times ahead.
Exiled on the island of Patmos by edict of
Rome, John has an amazing vision of the future that God would bring to pass
after the dark times at hand. It is hard to read the words of Isaiah and the vision
of John and stay scared. It is hard to hear the words of these divine mad men
and not want to get up and dance.
In recent years, an aging Roman
Catholic South American priest visited the U.S. and called all people of faith
to dance to a different tune than the prevailing music of fear and greed and
“Black Friday” consumption. Pope Francis is an elegant dancer who daily shows us
a different step, such as when he arrived in D.C. and eschewed attending an
elegant state dinner, instead, to attend a holy dinner with the homeless poor.
With much talk today of mass deportations
and building bigger walls, the Pope dances to a different tune, reminding us all
about refugees, “Perhaps you will be challenged by
their diversity, but know that they also possess resources meant to be shared.
So do not be afraid to welcome them.”
“Do not be afraid” is a chorus that echoes throughout
Scripture over the frequent din of fear. “Do not be afraid to welcome them,”
says the Pope. Easy for the Pontiff to say. He does not have to navigate all
the complexities of immigration policy, nor is he charged with protecting the
safety of citizens against those who would do us harm. “Sorry, Pope Francis, we
are afraid and for good reason.”
You can be sure, though, that a Pope from the
Latin South is anything but naïve about the real causes for fear out there,
just as Isaiah and John were not saying, “You have nothing to fear.” Isaiah,
John, Pope Francis know the reality of fear, but despite our fears, they invite
us to dance to a different tune, by which our fears are recognized, but they do
not cause us blindly to dismiss and discard those who are different from us.
Listen to these Advent lyrics from Isaiah and
see if your feet do not begin to tap and your fear begin to fade:
All
nations will stream to the mountain of God, all races, all peoples as one; From
the ends of the earth to the farthest of reaches, up to God’s mountain they’ll
come. Their weapons of anger will all become plowshares, pruning hooks come
from their spears; Out of Zion shall go forth instruction for justice, joy will
replace all their tears. O, the love of God flows down from the mountain, where
war is no more. All the people, the nations, singing together, sing of God’s
peace evermore! Joy flows down; let us go to the mountain of God. Love flows
down, down from the Lord. Peace flows down, peace ever more!
What the prophet Isaiah could only dream, the
refugee, John of Patmos, surely knew. He knew that no matter how dark the
clouds hanging over the world, the church, our lives, no matter how high and
oppressive the walls we build, the chorus of the old carol is finally true,
“The hopes and fears of all the years are
met in Thee tonight.”
Why? Because you and I not only follow the one
born in Bethlehem, we follow the Lord of the Dance who left the tomb empty that
first Easter morning. That is why we light the Advent candle of hope today.
That is why we follow the Lord of the Dance into God’s beloved world, a world still
consumed with fear and hatred, evil and intimidation, and even so, by God’s
grace, we are invited to enter this holy season of Advent and dance to a
different tune.
AMEN