Sermon for Sunday, July 30, 2017 – “The Scandalous Kingdom”

Sermon for Sunday, July 30, 2017 – “The Scandalous Kingdom”

Eighth Sunday after Pentecost
July 30, 2017
Good Shepherd Lutheran Church
Decorah, Iowa
Rev. Amy Zalk Larson

Click here to see scripture passages for the day.

Beloved of God, grace to you and peace in the name of Jesus.

The kingdom of heaven is like a small mustard seed planted in a garden that grew into a huge tree. So, this parable means we should experience amazing growth in our lives and in the church, right? We can expect to keep growing bigger, better, stronger and maybe even richer. Wait, that’s the American rags-to-riches story; but sometimes it influences how we read the Bible.

The parable about the woman making bread is often understood the same way.  A little yeast can make a big difference, so expect great things.

The notes in my study Bible describe these as “parables of tremendous growth.” That’s certainly a valid way to interpret them. Later in Matthew we’re told that even faith as small as a mustard seed can accomplish great things.

But there’s more going on here then tremendous growth. Jesus’ words would have totally shocked his audience. He likens the kingdom of heaven to things they believed to be unclean and wrong.

 “The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed that someone took and sowed in the garden.” The thing is, Jewish law specifically forbids sowing mustard seeds in gardens. Gardens are meant for vegetables, so putting a mustard seed in one violates the Holiness Codes about keeping diverse things separate. Planting a mustard seed in a garden would be like selling McDonald’s French Fries at the farmer’s market or maybe bratwurst at Nordic Fest, but much more serious and shocking. The ancient Holiness Codes kept the people safe and gave them their identity.

So, Jesus isn’t just talking about big growth from a small seed. He’s talking about growth from a seed that should not have been where it was planted. The sowing and the growth that resulted are scandals – illegitimate, tainted, unclean.

The parable about the woman baking bread is even worse. Our translation reads, “the kingdom of heaven is like yeast that a woman took and mixed in with three measures of flour until all of it was leavened.” That sounds nice, but the real meaning is lost in translation.

For one thing, in the Greek Jesus says the kingdom of heaven is like leaven, not yeast. Jesus isn’t talking about nicely packaged, controlled yeast that we use now. He’s talking about leaven that was made by taking a piece of bread and setting it in a damp, dark place until mold formed – like a sourdough starter. The rotten bread was then mixed into flour to make leavened bread. Leaven was viewed as something that corrupted; it was a metaphor for sin and its capacity to infect.

Leavening produced larger loaves that fed a family longer; but it was viewed as unholy for the everyday. Unleavened bread was for the holy, the sacred, feasts. This woman was making enough bread for a feast. She had three measures of flour- equal to 144 cups today. So, she ruined a lot of good flour by adding leaven to it. Also, the Greek here doesn’t say that the woman mixed in the leaven; it says that she hid it. Besides, in the Holiness Codes, women were associated with uncleanness and impurity.

So, Jesus is saying the kingdom of God is like an unclean woman, hiding the corrupting leaven in order to infect a huge amount of flour.

There’s more going on here than growth.

Jesus associates God’s coming kingdom with uncleanness just as Jesus associated with people who were considered unclean. It seems Jesus is trying to mess with ideas of what is sacred and good. Things that appear profane and unclean may actually help to bring about God’s kingdom.

So, when we’re frightened, when we’re repelled, when we’re certain something is wrong, we should pay close attention. Maybe it’s precisely then that God’s kingdom is at work in our lives.

When we’re certain that we are right and good and true, when we want to follow our own rules about keeping diverse things separate, then we may just need God to sow a mustard seed in our garden or hide some leaven that will change us.

After Jesus describes the scandal of the mustard seed’s planting, he goes on to tell how this seed grew into a tree and the birds of the air made nests in its branches. Hearing this would have reminded Jesus’ first audience of an Old Testament vision in which God promises a tree where all birds will nest, all nations will be sheltered, and all people will find fruit enough to be fed. Jesus implies that the tree for the healing of the nations will come from a seemingly unclean, tainted, improperly planted mustard seed. And, the bread that the woman made, while seemingly corrupt, unholy, and ordinary, could feed many, many people.

So, that which seems to us wrong or corrupt could be the very thing God is using to shelter, to feed, to bring in the kingdom. We can’t know for sure as the last parable we heard today reminds us; it’s not up to us to judge what’s good or bad. Maybe something really is corrupt, but maybe God is still at work through it to bring good.

These parables invite us to be open to the transformation that can come from the mixing of diverse kinds – including the mixing of people with diverse perspectives and backgrounds. Such mixing can feel threatening at first, yet it can help us to grow as people and as a community. Can we be open to things and people we find repulsive, threatening, or just plain wrong? Can we see God at work even through them?

These parables encourage not to focus on purity and separation but on growth that brings shelter and feeds people. They push us past our rigid categories and remind us to look for God everywhere, in everything.

God grant that we be open to this kind of tremendous growth.

Let’s take a moment for silent prayer.

This Week at Good Shepherd, July 31-August 6

Tuesday, August 1
5:00 p.m. – Kids’ Lunch Club packing
7:00 p.m. – Congregation Council Meeting

Thursday, August 3
10:00 a.m. – Bible Study with Pastor Amy
1:30 p.m. – Property & Management Committee
5:00 p.m. – Community Meal at First Lutheran

Sunday, August 6 – Ninth Sunday after Pentecost
9:30 a.m. – Worship with Holy Communion – Live Broadcast
10:30 a.m. – Fellowship Hour

Nordic Fest 2017 – Events, News, and Worship…

GOOD SHEPHERD LUTHERAN CHURCH and NORDIC FEST 2017EVENTS, NEWS, and WORSHIP ...

THURSDAY, JULY 27:
10:00 a.m. –
Bible Study with Pastor Amy in Narthex

6:00 – 9:00 p.m. – Good Shepherd Krumkake Booth opens at the Fest

FRIDAY, July 28:
7:00 a.m. – 9:00 p.m. – Krumkake Booth at the Fest and serving RAGBRAI

9:00 a.m. – Noon – Fest Garden Tour: Connie (Master Gardner) and Tom Buresh, 905 Locust Road (also Saturday afternoon)

9:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. – Krumkake Demonstrations begin in Bank of the West Lobby

1:00 – 3:00 p.m. – Carol Hoeg Oliver signs The Curve of Her Life: Folk Artist Laura Hjelle Hoeg at Vesterheim’s Museum Store (also Saturday afternoon)

SATURDAY, JULY 29:
9:00 a.m. – 9:00 p.m. – Krumkake Booth at the Fest

9:30 a.m. – 7:30 p.m. – Krumkake Demonstration in BOW Lobby

1:00 – 3:00 p.m. – Laura Hoeg Oliver book signing at Museum Store

1:00 – 5:00 p.m. – Fest Garden Tour: Connie and Tom Buresh, 905 Locust Road

2:00 p.m. – Vintage Baseball at Viking Stadium: Decorah Driftless Dodgers Exhibition Game – Reds vs Blues. Several members and friends participate. Good Shepherd’s Band will provide pre-game music and play for the game.

SUNDAY, JULY 30:
8:45 a.m. – Pick-up Choir rehearsal

9:30 a.m. – Eighth Sunday after Pentecost – Nordic Fest Worship Service with Holy Communion

From Pastor Amy – We will celebrate the contributions of Scandinavians in our life together as we share the good news of Jesus for all the world. Prayers will be offered in both English and Scandinavian languages.You are encouraged to wear Scandinavian attire to church!

10:30 a.m. – Fellowship Hour – Carol Hoeg Oliver will sign your copies of her book about Decorah’s ‘Nisse Lady” – The Curve of Her Life: Folk Artist Laura Hjelle Hoeg. Good Shepherd’s collection of Laura’s Nisse and two of her Advent-Christmas panels will be displayed. Carol’s book is available at Vesterheim’s Museum Store (also online at the Museum’s website) and Dragonfly Books. Also, LWR Fair Trade Coffee Sale.   

   

 

Good Shepherd Celebrates Decorah’s “Nisse Lady” Laura Hoeg, 1904-1994

Laura, her husband Victor, and their children Carol and Bob were Charter Members of Good Shepherd.  Her daughter, Carol Hoeg Oliver has recently published a book about her mother, The Curve of Her Life: Folk Artist Laura Hjelle Hoeg. The book is available at Vesterheim’s Museum Store and Dragonfly books. She will be signing her book at the Museum Store on Friday and Saturday of Nordic Fest from 1:00-3:00 p.m. On Sunday, July 30, Carol will attend Good Shepherd’s Nordic Fest worship service and sign previously purchased books during the  Fellowship Hour.

Good Shepherd’s collections of Laura Hoeg’s works will be displayed in the Fellowship Hall this Sunday. Ten Nisse representing a variety of shapes, sizes, and styles will be displayed on the tables and two of her five large Advent-Christmas panels which depict the Nativity of our Lord in pictures and word are hung on the wall. One panel provides the Christmas story from Luke; the other depicts shepherds tending sheep, listening to an angel.  

        

About the Advent-Christmas Panels …

Five 4×8 feet panels depicting the Nativity of our Lord in pictures and words were created and painted by Laura and first hung on the east wall of the original sanctuary for the Advent-

Christmas seasons of 1959 where they served as a backdrop for the altar. Over the years, these panels have been displayed in the renovated Fellowship Hall during these seasons of the church year; they were featured in 2008 as part of the congregation’s 50th anniversary celebration. Grapevines, leaves, and flowers are integrated into the designs and borders of each panel. When hung in order, the first, third, and fifth pictorial panels depict shepherds tending sheep, listening to an angel; the Holy Family in the stable with angels above; and the Wise Men bearing gifts with the star overhead. The words on the second and fourth panels provide accounts of Jesus’ birth from Matthew and Luke.

 

This Week at Good Shepherd, July 24-30, 2017

Monday, July 24
8:30 a.m. – Krumkake Bake
1:30 p.m. – Krumkake Bake

Tuesday, July 25
10:00 a.m. – Pick Up Choir
10:00 a.m. – Visitation with Nelson Family
11:00 a.m. – Memorial Service for Corinne Nelson
5:00 p.m. – Kids Lunch Club Packing
7:30 p.m. – Band Rehearsal

Wednesday, July 26
11:00 p.m. – Communion at Eastern Star
3:00 p.m. – Education Committee

Thursday, July 27
10:00 a.m. – Bible Study with Pastor
6:00 p.m. – Nordic Fest Krumkake Booth (until 9 p.m.)

Friday, July 28
7:00 a.m. – Nordic Fest Krumkake Booth (until 9 p.m.)
9:30 a.m. – Krumkake Demonstration (until 5 p.m.)

Saturday, July 29
9:00 a.m. – Nordic Fest Krumkake Booth (until 9 p.m.)
9:30 a.m. – Krumkake Demonstration (until 7:30 p.m.)
2:00 p.m. – GS Band plays at Vintage Baseball Game

Sunday, July 30 – Nordic Fest Worship Service
8:45 a.m. – Pick-up Choir Rehearsal
9:30 a.m. – Worship with Holy Communion – Live Broadcast
10:30 a.m. – Fellowship Hour – Coffee Sale – Book Signing by Carol Hoeg Oliver