May 2, 2021 "This is a Desert Road" Rev. Dal McCrindleMany of us grew up on bedtime stories that were much more than simple children's stories. Behind them were teachings, morals and ethics. As we listened, fables, allegories and fairy tales helped us formulate what is right and what is wrong; what is fair and what is unkind; what is loving and what is evil. All of this we learned as children; and yet so often, as adults, when we turn to the Bible, we hear the account of how his followers remembered Jesus, his actions, his words, the disciples, the prophets, kings and nations.make relevant the scriptures for a contemporary world. He explains the Hebraic concept of Midrash or investigation, a centuries old way of interpreting and using one’s religious writings of a former age to explain and understand an experience in the present.For Israel, Moses was the greatest leader since under his leadership, the people were delivered from slavery. Moses ascended a holy mountain to talk with God, face to face. He received laws, provided food, and healing in the wilderness.If the followers of Jesus believed that God had acted in a unique and dramatic way, changing all they ever knew about God, it is not difficult to see why they would describe their Messiah in deliverance and Exodus terminology, breaking even the slavery of death. When Jesus preaches and teaches on holy hills, presides at banquets where all are fed with an abundance left over; when he heals people of diseases and talks with God, face to face, and finally, like Moses and Elijah is absorbed into God's very being...this is Midrash -- Jesus, whom God had raised is described in language once reserved for Moses, Elijah, David, Adam and even God.With Midrash, all of the stories of the Hebrew and Christian Testaments need to be valued no less than the stories with which we grew up. For behind them all are the teachings, morals, allegories and statements of our belief and faith, which brings us to today's story.An angel of the Lord, a euphemism for God's Spirit speaks to Philip, "Rise and go toward the south, to the road that goes down from Jerusalem to Gaza." The author then inserts a short descriptive sentence which could be missed but summarizes what this story is about. THIS IS A DESERT ROAD. Anyone with knowledge of this area of Palestine knows that this is a wilderness road ... but listen to a desert described: for Philip encounters an Ethiopian Eunuch, a servant of the Candace, queen of Ethiopia.The unnamed Ethiopian had been to Jerusalem to worship at the Temple. On route home, he had stopped beside the road to read part of a scroll of Isaiah that he may have obtained at the Holy City. Philip, again moved by the Spirit goes and joins the Ethiopian. "Do you understand what you are reading?" Requesting assistance, the Ethiopian invites Philip to come and sit with him. "As a sheep led to the slaughter or a lamb before its shearers is dumb, so this one does not say a word. In the humiliation of the silent one, justice was denied. Who can describe the generation of the one whose life is taken up from the earth?"Philip shares his experience of Jesus and after travelling on a bit, they came across some water, in the desert; they stop and Philip baptizes the Ethiopian. Once again God's Spirit is active and whisks Philip away once the sacrament is complete; and the Ethiopian went on his way rejoicing. THIS IS A DESERT ROAD! Eunuchs, were often employed as guardians of the harem, temple assistants or servants of women. In spite of the many religious avenues available to him, the Ethiopian had been attracted by the faith of Israel, and had been to Jerusalem to worship. Maybe he was attracted by a God who had promised to bring life where there was only death; hope when there was only hopelessness. Like any pilgrim he had taken away one of the religious pamphlets; maybe he bought a scroll. But as Philip finds him, he remains a futile inquirer on a desert road. Even though he was an important and wealthy official in the service of a queen, he could never be received as one of the faithful. Because of his sterility, his belief, his profession of faith would never be enough. He was marginalized, one of the excluded. In Deuteronomy 23:1, it is written that no one like him could ever be admitted to the assembly of the LORD. He would always journey and exist "on a desert road." Israel had been called to a land flowing with milk and honey. This story is about one who would always be in the desert. Children of Abraham had been called to be fruitful and to multiply, it was their duty; he was sterile. They had been called to worship and praise God in the assembly. All he could do was to stand in the outer courts of the temple, far from the sacred places and wish. Never would he be welcomed as an heir to Abraham and Sarah, no matter how faithful, devoted or generous. As a Gentile embracing the faith, there could be no cleansing baptism for him, no welcome from the road of his desert. He would be rejected, jeered at and called obscene names. He was black, gentile and only half a man. For some, everlasting life was understood in the life that continues in one's children; so in the minds of some, even everlasting life is denied him. No flowers grow on this road - it is a barren place; and yet the Spirit of God directs Philip down this road, to find this Ethiopian, to explain the scripture, to permit the Ethiopian to hear in its lines, his own story: in his humiliation, justice was denied. This was a desert road, a hopeless place but it was not without the saving grace of God in Christ Jesus..."and as they went along the road, they came to some water...and Philip baptized him and the Eunuch went on his way rejoicing.” Sometimes, life seems to be a desert road and our day-to-day existence is spent in barren places. We remember past struggles, differences of opinion, times when we felt ignored, betrayed or rejected. We think of past disappointments, sorrows and tragedies and wonder; "Where is God; where is the life-giving water that can turn my desert into a lush meadow again?" We might wistfully remember when our churches were filled each and every Sunday; when the inquirers and the distressed came to seek answers to life's overwhelming questions. The church, like Philip is called by angels, indeed by God's very own spirit to go to the crossroads where the hopeless, helpless and loveless pass by; and there, offering refreshment and life-giving water, transform their desert to blooming gardens of beauty. Philip could have ignored the angel and blocked the way of this man’s saving. But, in reacting to God's leading he encountered one who was deemed unacceptable and without hope. He offered acceptance, inclusion and provided a channel for God's love. He reached across the barriers of religious and secular society and created life in the desert. As a branch of the living vine, Philip touched the Ethiopian with the very love of Christ which transformed his wilderness-death into meadow-growth. Can we do any less? As branches of the same vine, watered at the same well, what blossoms and fruit grow? Do we like Philip, bear the fruit of Christ-like living? When a word or sign of hope, help and love is needed for transformation; do we speak, do we act or does the desert dryness remain? Who are excluded today because of prejudice, custom, language, economics. Too many of our neighbours are maligned because of their dress, the aroma of their food or the inappropriate behaviour of some. Too many receive the disdain of their neighbours because they choose to live in certain areas of the city close to family and friends, or wish to retain the language of their birth. "And when he came out of the water, the Ethiopian went on his way rejoicing!" "Come, let us sing to the Lord our song, we have stood silently too long; surely the Lord deserves our praise, so joyfully thank God for our days." At least that’s the way I see it!
St. David's United Church, West Vancouver