The Welcoming Face of God

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    The Welcoming Face of God

    January 4; Epiphany (Isaiah 60:1-6; Matthew 2:1-12; Ephesians 3:1-12)

    The Bible teaches us that the people God called in the Old Testament were not

    called simply for themselves. They were not called for their own ambitions and goals.

    They were not called simply for their families and friends. These people were calledfrom the beginning to be a blessing, a priesthood, to all the nations. Their purpose was

    for the world around them. For years the people of God seemed to live in relative

    isolation and almost hostility towards their neighbours. The people were to establishthemselves by Gods law and spirit so that they would be unlike their neighbours. The

    point of creating this distinct community was to offer light and salvation to those in

    darkness not because of the moral accomplishments of the people, not because they werein any way better or more special but because their lives were centered on the worship of

    the one true God creator of heaven and earth.

    In time the prophets and the psalmists picked up this vision. They saw at the

    heart of the people an alter; a place where we individually and communally open

    ourselves vulnerably before God. They believed that to this place the nations will come.To this place the world would draw close. The Psalmist says that all kings will bow

    down to him who is at the centre. Isaiah who we have heard from already this morningsays that as the LORD rises the nations will come to the light and the kings will turn

    towards its brightness. And what is more is that the nations will come and they will bring

    their wealth with them. They will open their storehouses and journey with their treasuresto the house of God.

    And now this morning we hear about some strange visitors. Contrary to popular

    tradition we dont actually know for sure how many of them came or who exactly theywere. Some have called them the three kings others have called them wise men. These

    men were likely some sort of astrologers. These are men of questionable character and

    religious practice by Jewish standards but they have come from a far away land in searchof a king and they have recognized this king in the child Jesus. They were faithful to the

    sign that was given, even when it took them off of the main roads that led to the major

    cities of power, even when it took them out in the country, even when it took them past

    the warmth of the inn and the smell of cooked food. They believed their sign even whenthey had to cover their noses from the smell of urine and manure and watch what was

    getting stuck to the bottom of their sandals. Here is where the star rested and so here was

    their king. To this child-king lying in a feed-trough they opened their chest and offeredgold, frankincense and myrrh. As the Old Testament had told of long ago the nations

    would flow to the light of God as so it began with these men.

    There was a time when it troubled me to think about the nations bringing theirwealth to the Kingdom of God. What did the Old Testament mean by this act? Was the

    Gods kingdom going to be established and recognized by earthly wealth? This reality

    seemed so foreign to the experience of the Jews when they returned from Exile andcertainly from Jesus own ministry. Does the welcoming face of God come with a price?

    So in preparation for this sermon I decided to see how these items brought by the magi

    were used in other places in the Old Testament. It quickly became clear that all three ofthese things were used predominantly for the purposes of acts of worship. Even gold,

    which does at times simply designate monetary wealth, is far and away most often used

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    in reference to objects used in worship. This of course was evident to see all along as it

    says right there in the text that the magi came explicitly to worship to this king. But I

    wonder if I am alone in separating worship from things such as wealth, politics, andsociety. I have been deeply impacted lately by the way that proper and faithful worship

    shapes the beginning and end of our life with God.

    I have heard the phrase work and worship are one in Mennonite circles. As Iunderstand it this phrase points to the reality that your work should not be separate from

    your worship. This is true. However, the phrase may not go far enough. The Bible

    teaches us that there is in fact only worship and that our life and work will always alreadybe in the service of some form of worship. The issue is not trying to understand how we

    can transform our work into an act of worship but in recognizing in whose service of

    worship our work is already engaged? And as Christians we are called not only torecognize that ourwork is already worship but that the world around us, the people and

    the systems, are also form their own acts of worship. This means recognizing that the

    political systems and social structures are also liturgical expressions. Our malls are

    cathedrals where we seek comfort and security. In the west we sing anthems to our state,

    pledge allegiance to its security, establish missions to strengthen our presence within andoutside our borders, we tithe to it and we submit to its discipline. Much of our lives are

    spent in the liturgical rhythms of living into the Canadian or the Western Idea. Eventhough we may, in our minds, believe otherwise we still live as though the church is

    essentially a side-project, a hobby, a club, a support group or a relief organization. The

    nations come to worship and give allegiance to a king and not to an idea or to a hobby orproject. They stream to Christ, leaving their homes, leaving their allegiances, and they

    come to humbly enter a new kingdom.

    Our third reading this morning comes from the Apostle Paul. Paul establishedhimself as an influential figure within Judaism. As a Pharisee Paul was concerned with

    the practical relevance and practice of the Mosaic Law. It could be said of the Pharisees

    that their goal was indeed that worship and work would be one. But at that time inhistory most of Judaism understood itself as a national religion. It was a religion based

    on geography, culture, and lineage. It is like the particular assumptions that come to

    mind for many of us when we use the word Mennonite. We think of food, dress and

    actions. Jesus however did not define his life and ministry by the same parameters as theJewish leaders did. Jesus in fact did not seem to fit within any system established in the

    Jewish or Gentile world. Jesus was born as the king of only one kingdom. In time Paul

    himself was converted to this Kingdom. In fact Paul recognized that this kingdom wasfundamentally different then how the world has conceived of its governments and

    kingdoms. This kingdom exists within Christ. In fact early in this letter Paul goes so far

    as to say that the whole universe is contained and held together in the body of Christ.The magi and nations now flow not to another king who wields power at the tip of the

    sword or the end of a gun. They come now to king whose sword flows from the words of

    his mouth. They come now before the face of God.It is this shift in conceiving how our lives are lived together in Christ that allows

    the nations to be welcomed because they are no longer bound by land or culture. They

    are received now if they turn their face to the face of God. Later in our reading Paul callsthis relationship a mysterious economy, a new economy, though in English the word is

    often translated administration not economy. The Old Testament talks about the nations

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    bringing the wealth of their economy to God but this does not quite capture the picture.

    In Gods administration the wealth of the nations has no value in itself. Sitting in their

    storehouses the treasures of the nations are worthless. But if the treasures are opened andthey are brought before the Lord then they become valuable. The magis gifts only

    became valuable in their presentation to Christ. This is the mysterious economy of God.

    We believe that we can honour God with our value but in fact our value comes insteadwhen we open whatever gifts we have already been given before the welcoming face of

    God. It is the simple story of the widows mite in the New Testament. In Christs

    mysterious economy the womans small monetary gift outshine the filled treasure chestsof the wealthy. Pauls mission and ministry is to share this newly founded economy with

    the Gentiles. He hope too show them that they now have currency within it. This vision

    consumes his life and in our reading this morning he hopes to spread his vision toestablish another star for the nations to follow. He tells the Galatians that the intention of

    God is that this new and mysterious economy should be made known to the rulers and

    authorities of the world through the church.

    We are called to live out an economy reflected in the face of God. We are called

    on to show the nations that it is Gods face that gives value and worth to the world. It isthe light of Gods face that illuminates the truth and treasure of every person. I have to

    be honest and tell you that this Advent series on the face of God has not quite grabbed methe way I hoped. We say that it is possible to see the face of God in each other and this is

    a valuable gift we are given but I cant help but think that there is something more than

    simply seeing good things in each other. If we believe that the very body of our kingJesus was born on earth and rose from the dead then in some way there is only one face

    that we seek. We are parts of the body but we all look towards and point to the on face ofGod.

    At the close of the 18th

    century the world witnessed one of the most astounding

    events in the modern period. The French Revolution was a dramatic and intense

    overthrow of established power and order in France both of their government and of theirchurch. During the events that led up to the Revolution and thenthrough its wake one

    Catholic order offered a specific act of worship in response. It is told that in 1843 a nun

    of the Carmalite order received a word from Jesus who said to her, the earth is covered

    with crimes. The violation of the first three Commandments of God has irritated MyFather. The Holy Name of God blasphemed, and the Holy Day of the Lord profaned, fills

    up the measure in iniquities. These sins have risen unto the Throne of God and provoked

    His wrath which will soon burst forth if His justice be not appeased.In response to this revelation and in hopes of restoring the faithful witness of the

    church the order established a form of worship called devotion to the Holy Face. It was

    believed that humble and devoted attention to the face of Jesus in prayer and meditationwould bring healing and restore justice. The particular ethnic features of the face were

    not so important as were the depictions of Jesus life and death and often particularly of

    his suffering and death. It was understood that these practices carried real currency inGods Kingdom. They were acts such as what Paul called the church to in asking her to

    reveal the mysterious economy of God in the presence of the powers and authorities of

    the world. And there was perhaps no better audience of competing powers andauthorities in that time than in France.

    A young woman of fifteen years entered this particular order in 1888. She was

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    known as Therese of Lisieux and she would die only 11 years later but in that time she

    established one of the most lasting and profound expressions of turning towards the face

    of God. There is wrapped up in her prayers an implicit understanding of Gods economyand of its vision of spreading to all nations. There is even something of the magis

    journeying in her own spiritual quest. And as usual the saints around us can do so much

    better in a prayer or poem than I can in sermon. In one poem titled My Heaven here onEarth she writes this,

    Your Face is my only Homeland.Its my Kingdom of love.

    . . .

    Your Face is my only wealth.I ask for nothing More.

    Hiding myself in it unceasingly,

    I will resemble you, Jesus . . .Leave in me the Divine impress

    Of your Features filled with sweetness,

    And soon Ill be holy.I shall draw hearts to you.

    I just think that is one of the most beautiful things I have read in some time. I cameacross this poem when I was already almost finished my sermon and it summed up and

    turned into a prayer everything I hoped to say. As the magi were so we too are searching

    for our king. Our star is the face of God. Turn and travel with it wherever it will takeyou. Find yourself, find your worth and your wealth within it. May the face of God then

    turn and shine upon the rulers and authorities of this world. Have no doubt that in Gods

    face you will not only bring light but you will also shake the world that the world toowould begin their journey. My prayer is that the church could now pray as Therese did to

    God saying, Your Face is my only Homeland.

    Amen.