Title: “Just Deal with It”
Text: Mark 5:1-20
Day: 2011-12 Narrative Lectionary
Date: January 22, 2012
Take one look at my office here at the church and you will discover that I am not the neatest person in the world. Some offices look immaculate, almost like they’re never used. The desk is clear of clutter. The pens and pencils are all back in their little jars. Everything is back in its rightful place.
…That is just NOT the way I work. I admit, it’s the way that I WISH I did things. I actually like clean offices. But for me – no, no – I’m a mess-maker. My office looks like someone threw in a bomb and once everything settled, I just went back to work.
It’s not nearly so bad at home. Not because I’m cleaner there, but because at home I live with Eryn. Eryn is one of those neat people. She is the one who ensures that the house stays in good looking order, so my mess-making is limited there. It is limited, in fact, to what we have endearingly called “my pile.” This monstrosity sits at the end of our kitchen table and it is the place where I can stash anything I wish.
What’s in my pile, you ask? Well, as of this morning, it contains a plastic bag full of items given to us by someone that I have to either put away or give away; two packs of batteries (which are supposed to come to the church!); a library book that I want to read; a BACKPACKER magazine; two more library books that may be overdue; a letter from Johnson & Johnson (a stock that I own) dated in November that probably asks for my proxy vote on some issues that I don’t really care about; and an envelope from Trinity Lutheran Seminary (I put it there to remind me to talk to Eryn about sending some money their way).
This pile, in other words, has become a place where things go when I just am too lazy to deal with it right away, or when I just don’t know what to do about it, or when I intend to act on it but – because it’s in my pile – I often forget about it until after the fact. My pile is a place where stuff goes to be forgotten.
Every once in a while I get the urge to tackle this localized mess within our beautiful house, but more often than not my own pile scares me. After a while, I forget what’s in there and I don’t really want to dig into it to find out.
So, it occurs to me that this is kind of what the townspeople did in our Gospel reading this morning. But they didn’t do it with stuff – overdue library books, unopened letters and the like. No, no…they did it with a PERSON: namely, the demoniac that we hear about it today’s reading.
To set the scene, Jesus and his disciples were coming from the other side of the sea of Galilee. They had just been in Capernaum and the surrounding area, where Jesus had been cryptically teaching about the Kingdom of God using all sorts of strange parables and stories. So after enduring a sudden, strong storm on the sea, Jesus and the disciples finally reach the shore. But before they could do anything, before they could go anywhere, this man – this demoniac – just shows up.
Who is he? Well, we get the sense that he may have been a normal citizen at one point. But then he became possessed by a demon and – at that point – the townspeople tried to deal with him and couldn’t. The text says: “no one could restrain him any more, even with a chain; for he had often been restrained with shackles and chains, but the chains he wrenched apart, and the shackles he broke in pieces; and no one had the strength to subdue him.” And without the means or the will to try and deal with this man any longer, it seems that they took him far away – far beyond the city walls – to a place they rarely visit…the graveyard. And there they chain him up and leave him, hoping against hope that they might be able to get rid of this pesky problem with the old “out-of-sight-out-of-mind-trick.”
Let me stop there for a moment and just say that I know that we all have things that we put aside, for many different reasons. We are scared of what they might bring up. We don’t want to finish something that we are particularly enjoying. Or we are just lazy. So, we all have things that we have chained up, and we hope to never have to deal with them again. These things include our troubled pasts…perhaps our own struggles with alcohol, drugs, or some other addiction have been chained up out there, not really dealt with and – therefore – not really “gone;” just dormant.
Failed relationships…yeah, they’re out there, too. These include – among other things – our relationships that have gone awry with family and friends, now simply put aside so that we don’t have to think about them anymore.
There’s all kinds of stuff out there, chained up so that we can try our best to ignore it. Those promises that you made that have never been kept. They’re out there. Those words that you said to your father when you were 16 and never apologized for. They’re out there. Stewardship sermons! They’re out there, too! There’s all kinds of stuff in these “graveyards”…these places of death that we hope might have some influence on these less-than-savory issues. (Political candidates, incidentally, inevitably have to endure other people going through their graveyards and digging up all the stuff they’ve thrown aside. That’s one of the prices I guess they have to expect to pay!) The point is: these graveyards are full of the stuff we would rather just forget. But what would happen if someone were to gain access to all of that stuff? And what if that someone were Jesus?
Well, in our Gospel story today, I suppose that’s exactly what happens. This contact-starved demoniac runs up to meet Jesus, and – at once – Jesus recognizes what has happened to this man. Somehow Jesus already knows about the demon; about this man’s unwilling imprisonment among the tombs; he seems to already know everything. And so what does he do? Jesus doesn’t ignore the man. He doesn’t keep him in chains. He doesn’t walk away and say “He’s someone else’s problem.” No. Instead, he just deals with it.
And – in fact – we will see Jesus do this over and over again throughout Mark’s Gospel. One of the reasons this Gospel seems to go so fast is because Jesus doesn’t waste any time doing things that need to be done. He just deals with them. So, you’re demon-possessed? Okay, well…be healed! You’re a tax-collector? Okay, well…follow me, and I’ll show you a new way of life free of cheating! You’re a notorious sinner? Okay, well…come, eat this bread, drink this cup and be transformed! You’re a self-righteous person? Okay, well…listen to what I have to say and let your mind be renewed! There isn’t a person in the gospel – not a sinner, not a Pharisee, not even Judas the Betrayer – not one person in the gospel stories that Jesus doesn’t just deal with right away. There are no piles left behind. Only disciples. There are no loose ends. Only followers.
So what are you hiding? What would you rather not face? What have you been ignoring and burying for years on end? Are you willing to let Jesus see it, encounter it, and know it? True, it may hurt…it may cost a lot…but you can be assured that it will be dealt with by none other than Jesus himself.
No fuss…No muss!
Amen.
