We are coming to the end of the Season
after Pentecost, or Ordinary time, and Advent is fast approaching.
The end of the Church year is only two weeks away. If we didn't know
that by looking at a calendar, we might have an inkling of it by the
selection of gospel texts.
Keep alert. Stay awake. The
bridegroom is coming but we know not when. The season of hopeful
anticipation is at hand.
All of that said, I find today's
parable of the ten bridesmaids to be one of the most difficult to
deal with. We have a story of ten bridesmaids waiting for the
bridegroom to arrive so they can celebrate with the new couple. They
all fall asleep. Then, when the time comes, five of them will not
share their oil with the other five, forcing them to go look for
supplies in the middle of the night. When those five eventually come
back, they find themselves locked out of the party to which they were
originally invited.
I find this parable to be more
depressing than hopeful. But this is what we get as we near the end
of Jesus' ministry on earth and his refocusing on the end times:
stories of who's in and out, stories of inclusion and exclusion. So
what can we take from this parable for our lives today?
The first thing we need to avoid is
saying that this parable is clearly about “X”, because as soon as
we do that there are valid points and questions to the contrary. And
then we begin asking, “If it's not about “X”, then what is it
about?” The best we can do is to put forth possible and plausible
interpretations.
Two possible and plausible
interpretations is that this parable is about 1) doing the works of
ministry and the works of the Church continually, and 2) we need to
look beyond and ahead of ourselves. These are not two separate
interpretations as much as they are two interpretations that are
deeply intertwined.
In the first interpretation, the
burning lamps represent our works of ministry. Notice that all ten
women had lamps. The story implies that all ten lamps were lighted
when the women originally went to meet the bridegroom. And all ten
lamps were lighted when the ten women all fell asleep.
In this interpretation, the lighted
lamps represent our works of ministry. As Christians we are called
to work for the gospel. Last week we made promises to this effect:
Will you proclaim by word and example the Good News of God in Christ?
Will you seek and serve Christ in all persons? Will you strive for
justice and peace among all people? These are the works of the
gospel and these works are the lights of our lamps. As Christians we
are called to do these things in a variety of ways and to infuse
ourselves with these actions and attitudes in such a way as they
become part of our lives, whether we are awake or asleep. Let your
light shine at all times.
But then we get the differentiation
between the five foolish and five wise. And here I want to put my
own spin on the story. This interpretation incorporates both part of
the first interpretation – doing the works of the gospel – with
where we are right now in the life of the church, and particularly
our parish.
The five foolish bridesmaids brought no
oil, while the five wise bridesmaids did. All ten had lamps that
burned while they were awake and asleep. All ten, in that respect,
did the works of the gospel (see above). However, the foolish looked
only at the short-term, only to the here and now, while the wise
looked to the long-term beyond the here and now (where we are right
now).
Right now we are officially wrapping up
our pledge drive today. That doesn't mean we will stop collecting
pledge cards, but it does mean that the official drive is over. This
always seems to be a tense time for certain people as we try to
budget for the upcoming year and/or as we try to get a handle on
expenses. And everywhere I've been there is always a push to cut
costs or programs in order to meet expenses. “We need to focus on
ourselves until we get the budget under control.”
This, my friends, is short-sighted and
foolish. For this is exactly what the five foolish bridesmaids did –
only focused on themselves in the here and now, without planning for
the future, without bringing extra oil.
I received an article in my box a few
weeks ago from the Washington Post about churches needing to do
business differently than they've always done it. This article
stated that that meant mergers and closures. And while it seems to
be all doom and gloom (maybe like today's parable), two things jumped
out at me. One was that death always leads to resurrection. But
that's a topic for later.
The second was the statement,
“shrinking outreach into the community [leads] to a membership
slide.” By focusing only on ourselves, by not bringing that extra
oil that allows us to go beyond what we only have in our lamps, we
are being foolish.
The five wise bridesmaids had oil for
their lamps and burned that oil so their lamps were lighted when they
were both awake and asleep. But they also recognized that at some
point they would have to provide light beyond what their lamps could
provide in the here and now. They would have to prepare for the
long-term and carry extra oil. This is the mark of the wise, looking
beyond the here and now. We must not be so focused on cutting costs
and programs and budgets that our lights only shine for the
short-term. We must recognize that we need to plan to have our
lights shine in the long-term.
The extra oil represents long-term
stewardship and mission. How we care for this place, our
stewardship, allows it to be a beacon to those around us. How we do
the works of the gospel, our mission, allows people to see the light
of Christ in their daily lives. The extra oil of the five wise
bridesmaids represents our ability and our willingness to look beyond
the short-term, beyond simple cost-cutting measures that allow us to
keep our doors open. It may be that that extra oil not only allows
us to be part of the party, but that it allows us to host the party.
As we wrap up our pledge drive, let's
not be foolish and only light our lamps for the short-term, but let
us continue to be bold in Christ and foolishly wise by preparing for
the future and carrying extra oil for the works of the gospel.
Otherwise we may just end up discovering that we weren't doing the
work of the gospel, we were simply maintaining our club. And
maintaining our club is not what Jesus is asking us to do.
Amen.
1 comments:
I sort of knew that lack of outreach leads to a 'membership slide', but I'd never really put the idea into concrete words/thought. :)
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