Well, you know what they say: just can’t hear too many sermons on the book
of Habakkuk can you? Habakkuk
reminds me of what my kids are like when I promise them ice cream when they
finish their chores. More
specifically Habakkuk reminds me of what my kids are like after I’ve promised
them ice cream but before the promise is fulfilled and while they still are in
the midst of their dreaded chores.
Because this is when they tend to display what we call…lament.
There is quite a strong tradition in the OT of
complaining to God about injustice and suffering. It’s lamenting - and we should perhaps reclaim this
part of our tradition…I have a friend who says if you’re going to have a praise
band in your church, that’s fine but only if you also have a lament band.
And there are some very real things to lament about folks; we’re
not talking petty complaints. Many of you this week were made aware of a
horrific spate of recent teenage suicides.
Billy Lucas, age 15, Seth Walsh, age 13, Asher Brown, age 13, and
Tyler Clementi, age 18, have all died at their own hands in the past 2
weeks. Billy, Seth, Asher and
Tyler were queer youth who ended the unendurable anti-gay violence done to them
at the hands of their churches, families or peers by doing life ending violence
to their own selves. And how can
we know of such things and not cry out to God like Habakkuk did in this way:
2O Lord, how long
shall I cry for help, and you will not listen? Or cry to you “Violence!” and
you will not save? 3Why do you make me see wrong-doing and look at trouble?
Destruction and violence are before me; strife and contention arise. 4So
the law becomes slack and justice never prevails. The wicked surround the
righteous— therefore judgment comes forth perverted
You have to admire Habakkuk for just calling a thing
what it is…for calling out God’s people for their injustices against each
other. I love the way some the characters in the old testament
really have it out with God – how they confront the Almighty… it’s downright
argumentative. Anymore if we are angry
with God we just give him the silent treatment. But not so with our ancestors in the faith. If they felt there was some serious
neglectful, abusive or absentee parenting from God they…you
know…complained. And their
complaints were not a sign of faithlessness. Quite the opposite really. Their complaints were a sign that they took God’s
promises seriously.
We don’t seem to have retained that part of the life
of faith very well. Maybe our
society’s general lack of covenant keeping diminishes the power of promises
these days. We don’t trust the
promises of the government, we don’t trust the promises of public schooling, we
don’t trust the promises of each other and we certainly don’t trust the church. So, it’s understandably acceptable to
just walk away when things gets
hard. When we no longer enjoy our
partners or our cars or our sneakers, we just dispense with them and get
something better.
So maybe it’s no surprise how easy it is to also
dispense with God when things get tough rather than just have it out like
Habakkuk…. as though it’s impolite or impius to remind God of God’s
promises. To say “you promised…
and all evidence points to the fact that you, God are not following through”. Yet people like the prophet Habakkuk
seemed to stick around in this covenant with God even when things got ugly and
that, my friends, is what this beautiful little book of Habakkuk is about. He’s like “the little prophet that
could”.
And
the central theme of Habakkuk is summed up in verse 4
Look
at the proud!
Their
spirit is not right in them,
but
the righteous live by their faith
The
prophet contrasts the proud whose spirit’s are not right in them to the
righteous who live by faith.
When I hear the term “the righteous” I don’t know
about you, but I honestly think
“Ned Flanders”. It’s easy to think
that the righteous means the same thing as the religious, the pius, the
priggish. But scholars much
smarter than myself agree that “righteous” in these texts is not primarily a
moral category – it’s a relational category. To be righteous then is to rely on God; to trust God; to
speak of God; to lean in to God. Righteousness
then is not as much about being
good as it is about having a heart which longs for that which it cannot create for itself…to be righteous is to be a person
- to be a people who are
worked upon by God. To be righteous
is to rely so deeply on God that we refuse to leave. … refuse to look to myself
or to a romance or to a job or to the free market economy to do what only God
can do. Righteous faith takes the promises of God seriously enough to be
unafraid of lament.
Unafraid to cry out to God that the
wicked surround the righteous…the Xenophiobic surround the unprotected
immigrant….the rich tax the poor, the powerful exploit the weak. Unafraid to cry to God why must we
see before us the queer youth who have taken their lives this week surrounded
as they were by hate and violence?
Why O God?
And when things get worse and not better Habakkuk
reminds God that “Hey. We are
suffering here. And you are our
God and what do you have to say for yourself?” And he waits. When God promised a vision to Habakkuk, the
prophet doesn’t go about life as usual.
he waits. he lurks. he
annoyingly and conspicuously
doesn’t leave. To be righteous is to hold God’s feet to the fire in the
midst of suffering and say “You
promised”.
This is what it means to be a people of God’s promises. When I promise my kids that I will take then
out for ice cream after we get all of our errands done… do they just never
mention it again and forget all about it by the time afternoon rolls
around? No they do not. you know what they do? They bug me. endlessly. They emotionally pull on my pant
leg. They often will say Mom, do
we still get to go out for ice cream even if I don’t clean all my room? What if I clean my room but don’t take
out the trash? As though
collective bargaining works for a 9 and 11 year old.
But here’s where the promises of God are
different. The promises of God to
which we cling are made and given completely apart from our own
righteousness. Christ does not
promise us that where two or more are gathered he will be there, you know, IF
you have all managed to be really good this week. A promise from God is made and given based on God’s
righteousness alone. Which, by the way, is a bit more
reliable of a resource than my own righteousness. God’s
righteousness is good news. God cares for this world God created— cares enough
not to let our folly and hate and brokenness spoil it forever. because this a
God of resurrection.
So, the righteous who live by faith are not the good
people who, because of their goodness are blessed by God, but those who live in
reliance to this God who is present not only at times of joy but also in times
of real suffering. So we lean into
the promise that God makes all
things new even when it doesn’t seem like that is happening. And when these promises seem so far
from being realized, then Faith is just how we live in the meantime. And
sometimes faith is simply the courage to lament. Faith is speaking the names of Billy,
Seth, Asher and Tyler and
refusing to let go of the promise of a world made new by a suffering God. Hear
how our prophet Habakkuk, ends his
book:
Though the fig tree does not blossom, and no fruit is on the vines; though the produce of the olive fails and the fields yield no food; though the flock is cut off from the fold and there is no herd in the stalls, 18yet I will rejoice in the Lord; I will exult in the God of my salvation. 19God, the Lord, is my strength
Alleluia. Amen.
(if you are a GLBTQ person and have been the victim of violence, or if you wish to elearn about how you can help prevent violence to the GLBTQ community go here National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs