Friday, January 29, 2010

Chapter 9: A Family, Act One, Scene One

So he came to a town in Samaria called Sychar, near the plot of ground Jacob had given to his son Joseph. Jacob's well was there, and Jesus, tired as he was from the journey, sat down by the well. It was about the sixth hour when a Samaritan woman came to draw water.
  The greatest enemy of faith is each other.  We tend to look at others as resources or challenges when we should be looking at them as fellow travelers.  Our inability to see our people as people is the single largest barrier to and individuals ability to achieve that vision that leads to faith.  We are seemingly intent on keeping each other in check, rather than encouraging each other to success.
  We’re about to visit with a woman that you may actually know quite well.  She’s the subject of many of your more important life lessons, yet  you probably have never really noticed her.  Let me tell you a little about her. 
  She has a brother and a sister.  In youth, both sisters were lovely, flirtatious and full of life.  One day the younger one said, "Brother, I have found someone I can make into my image of a man.  Give me my dowery from our estate, so I may marry him."  And though the older sister had not yet married, he did as she asked.  
  So, the young woman married.  But it was not long before she grew bored with this man she had made and returned to her flirtatious ways.  That vexed her husband beyond pliability and he divorced her, returning to her what was left of the dowery.  Now that she had shamed herself and the family, she got together all she had, and set off for a distant country that cared little about the religious issues of divorce.  There she married again ... and again ... and again.   
  Several years later, she finds herself unmarried, not as lively and lovely as she once was, and her wealth squandered by her own choice.  She longs for companionship, intimacy and commitment, but no one gives her anything.  It is a desperate time.  She lives now in a small home in a relatively large but unimpressive city.      
  We’re standing outside that home now.  There is a man emerging.  He is clearly frustrated.  He stands with hands on hips, a deep scowl on his face.  

Good Morning, sir.

Not from where I’m standing.

The day not starting our as anticipated?

Hardly.

What seems to be the problem?

All I wanted was some water to wash my face and get ready for the morning.

Seems reasonable.

I thought so.  Yet she throws me out. 

Are you sure there wasn’t any other rmotive behind her anger?

Oh, he said something about not being able to go to the well in the morning.

Why’s that?

Because she says the other women hate her.

That's a strong statement.

Yeah, well... she has this ...habit.

What habit?  
Taking other women’s husbands.

That could wear out one’s welcome in a small community pretty quick.

I suppose.

So why did you marry her?

I didn’t.  I’m married to someone else.

Oh.

Hey, I’m only human.  Oops!  Gotta go.

  The woman emerges from the home, disheveled and grumpy. As she adjusts her clothing and pushes her hair away from her face, we see a still lovely but once beautiful woman.  She is not what she was, but has not yet become what she sees herself to be.  She watches the man hurrying down the street and gives him a stare that could melt lead.  She knows the signs and stages of relationships.  She recognized the death rattle for this relationship.  She ambles about  briefly, picks up a pitcher, wraps her arms around it, then slumps into a chair.  She buries her hands in her face.  This seems to be a private moment and we have some other people to meet.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Chapter 8: Centurion, Part 1

At Caesarea there was a man named Cornelius, a centurion in what was known as the Italian Regiment.


Over the past few chapters we have search for 
faith in the realm of anticipation and expectation. 
Today we move into a new area of our search, 
where frustration and violence are the norm.


Faith doesn’t just happen.  There is a thought, an event or even 
just a casual word from a stranger that just 
seems so out of the ordinary that you can’t ignore it.  Faith invades 
your status quo at that moment and throws fear, 
uncertainty, even doubt into your conventional wisdom.  
You first thought on this invasion:  What’s the catch?.  
One might say that the initial evidence of real faith is ... suspicion.


We are at an outdoor religious service.  
People are flocking to hear an evangelist  in animal skins.  
He is baptisizing them in a muddy, shallow, slow moving river 
flowing through a desert wilderness. 
This is a familiar scene for many of us.  
But we are not concerned with the familiar.  
Over there, on that outcropping of rock above the river, 
is a man in a dull red cloak, huddled in the shadows of the rock.  
He is out of place in this gathering.  
That’s who we are looking for.  


Sir, a moment of your time.


I haven’t got time for you.  Be on your way.


We just have a few questions.  We won’t give you away.


What?  What do you mean?


We mean that we know you aren’t here to listen to the Baptist.


How do you know that?


You seem quite content with what and who you are.  
You are not a seeker of absolution.


And what am I then?


A servant of the status quo.  A Soldier.


That’s is very observant.


It wasn’t hard.  You are clean shaven with cropped hair in a land in 
where beards and long hair are the fashion.  
Also, your short sword was glistening in the sun.


Damn!  I thought I had that covered.


So.  May we talk a bit?  We are not from around here either 
so we have no agenda against you or your mission, whatever it may be.


There seems to be no harm in talking. I am not here in secret.  I’m juist being discrete.  What are your questions?


What are you doing here?


I thought you weren’t interested in my mission?


We have no agenda against it.  That doesn’t mean we have no interest in it.  
You are out of place here.  We are interested in the out of place.


Alright.  That man down there -- the baptist -- is causing quite a stir in both Jerusalem and Ceasaria.  Even though he hasn’t gone to either city.  I was ordered to find out what he is doing and why...and if it poses a threat.  He is, as you put it, out of place in our view of things.


And is he a threat?


Not as I can see.  In fact, he has some benefit to Rome.


How so?


He is insulting the local leaders; impuning their integrity.  And the people listen to him.  That weakens the leaders’ authority.  Makes them less likely to be able to stand up to the Roman authority.


But doesn’t that strengthen subversive movements that might be a threat?


Those kind of movements are poorly equipped, undisciplined and under trained.  They cannot stand up to the army of Rome.  They are merely an annoyance.


So you will be leaving soon?


Not so sure.


Why?


I am a soldier.  I understand authority.   A few minutes ago, a man came forward to be baptized.  The baptist stopped his preaching and talked quietly with him, deferentially. He recognizes this new man’s authority...and he hasn’t recognized any man’s authority.  The baptist has a following but not the desire to lead.  If he has found someone to submit to, his people will turn and follow whoever he tells them to.  Look!  There!  The baptist has sent two of his own after the new man.  That’s where the threat lies.  Not in the baptist.  He is now my mission.  I will follow him and find out what his plan is.


Very interesting.  We’ll catch up with you later.