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Children's Influence - Jim Hamilton

St. Mark’s Episcopal Church
Sunday, September 24, 2006
The Sixteenth Sunday after Pentecost

This Thursday, I helped organize the first Community Eucharist service of the Seabury Western Theological Seminary’s new school year. Worrying that I had forgotten all the intricate details and particulars expected of us when leading a service, the candles, which communion set to select, what the presider should wear…all these nitpicky details, I was not fully immersed in the actual service. I barely paid attention to the sermon.

It all went pretty smoothly until there was a flow problem with Communion. It was basically a traffic jam.

It took a redheaded two year old to jar me back into the reason for the service. His father, one of my classmates, walked him all the way from the other side of the room during the peace and said, “Isaiah said that he wants to give you the peace.” He looked bashful and squished up his face. But then, he opened up his chubby arms for a hug. I couldn’t have felt more welcome, I couldn’t have felt more at home.

The Episcopal Church is renown for being fussy. Propriety is often paramount in Anglican etiquette. And, there is some comfort in that. Being appropriate at all times can guard from being too intimate. Being appropriate at all times can shield us from the most important issues of poverty, disease, education and the environment. Being appropriate at all times can set boundaries on who is our neighbor. But, being present, being real, being CHILDREN is messy. A child talks in the middle of the sermon, a child asks for more host at Eucharist, a child is vulnerable, intimate and transparent.

In the ANE, that is what we call Jesus’ time, children had a slightly different importance than they have to us today. They meant possible labor. They meant a protection of the culture. And babies had a very difficult journey to adulthood.

In the ANE birthrate was higher, while the life expectancy was much lower. They were having many more babies per person than we do today, but many of them would not live past puberty. Infant mortality was around 30%, average, meaning that 3 of 10 children would have died before reaching one year of age. To put that into perspective, in the US it is about .6% (and that is the second worst in the modern world) and even the country with the highest current rate, Angola, is still less than 20%. What’s more, if children made it through infancy, they were only likely to live to age 20 and before reaching puberty they would likely have lost at least one of their parents. Only 10% made it past twenty. It was not ideal to be a child in the ANE. They were a vulnerable group, the first to die from disease and often orphaned without any chance of being provided for in any way.

Jesus was asking his disciples to take in these helpless and nearly hopeless and welcome them as if they were Christ himself.

This summer I worked as a chaplain in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at Good Samaritan Hospital. At that NICU, I witnessed many fragile newborns. Some were premature and hooked up to machines; others were born with deficiencies that made them more susceptible to disease. But, when I was preparing for this sermon, I was reminded again and again of one particular child. She was not born prematurely, but she was born with severe birth defects. Her respiratory system was not developed, she had difficulty breathing. Her legs were born broken. Her eyes were born crossed and fixed. And, her brain was only partially developed. I remember attending rounds where the Neonatologist requested that a nurse create a document for the parents explaining the fragility of their child so that authorities wouldn’t presume abuse if the baby should pass away in transit from the hospital. Her chances of survival, her chances to live any semblance of a normal life are more akin to the chances of the child that Jesus presents to his followers in today’s Gospel. So, I want you to recast the story in your imagination. Set it today, in a NICU at a hospital. Jesus is a Neonatologist holding rounds on all the patients. When he gets to this child, deformed and barely breathing, he lifts her out of her crib and says, “She is why we are here, she is the reason that we are called to this earth. We must take care of her as if she were a VIP. She is as important as I am. And whoever takes care of her, is taking care of God.”

For me, this magnifies the import of this passage. Children are precious and fragile, even more than they are today. And, we are to serve the most fragile, the most broken. We should not bother ourselves with progressing our own social standing.

The ANE was an Honor/Shame society. Status and position were deeply important in determining the social structure. Last week, we heard a story where Peter actually rebuked Jesus. This holds a great deal of weight in an Honor/Shame society. Peter may have been jockeying for control of the Jesus movement, or at least he was confused as to Jesus’ tenuous grasp on what they all hoped would be a revolution against the Romans. Because of their mistaken ideas of the future of Jesus’ mission, they were fighting over potential cabinet positions in the Jesus Kingdom. This kind of self-aggrandizement was a common cultural occurrence, and was often done publicly. Yet, they did understand that Jesus had a counter cultural ideal. Jesus’ condemnation of the Pharisees was fresh in the Disciples’ memories. They knew to not reveal what they were talking about.

But Christ knew what they were talking about. And he, once again, turned their notion of social propriety on its ear. He took a child, the story does not say whose, and cradled it. He charged the disciples to care for it. In my opinion this is a rallying cry for the spiritual attunement of stay-at-home-moms. A monk has nothing on a stay-at-home-mom. A child represents fragility, hope and openness. Think of the Christ child, think of Jesus telling Nicodemus to return to his mother’s womb, think of Christ saying, “let the little children come to me.” We are supposed to care for those as fragile and full of hope in our culture as children were in the time of the ANE. And we are also to become like children.

This takes me back to Isaiah’s hug, the redheaded two year old who jolted me back into the reason for Eucharist. The Eucharist is a time where we can bind our lives together and put our faith in the love of Christ. Be like a child. Love like a child. Have faith like a child. Trust in God like a child. And hear Christ’s command to take care of all the lost children of the world. Those who seem to be hopeless are often the one’s that God uses for the most spectacular miracles.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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