We had a wonderful time at New Wine United (2018,
Week 2) last week. These summer gatherings are a happy place for me, somewhere
where many of my worlds (places we have lived and friendships we have made over
the past quarter of a century) collide in creative ways. We loved listening to
dear friends share what they had learned from God. We loved singing songs of
worship written in our own days, in the context of our own lives. We got home
on Sunday night, and I went in to work on Monday morning expecting to catch up
with news, to work through emails and laundry…but instead we had to deal with
the aftermath of a break-in to the Minster in the early hours of that morning:
two broken windows; two shattered doors; a ladder, giving access to the bells,
ripped from the ringing-chamber wall; desk-drawers and filing-cabinets forced
open, and paperwork strewn all over the floor. A lot of damage, a huge amount
of mess – shards of glass everywhere – and nothing taken: the intruder,
arrested on site by the police, was almost certainly only after money, and
found none.
Welcome home!
It is one thing to meet with God with thousands of
other people who have come away on pilgrimage together for that very purpose,
and another to meet with God in the come-down.
That is where moving mountains comes in. Jesus
spoke about it, and we sing about it, but my sense is that we often think of
the mountains as the obstacles we face and seek the faith to overcome. That’s a
powerful image, but it is one that comes from The Lord of the Rings, not the Bible. Jesus makes a wholly other
point.
In the Bible, mountains are most often places where
God is encountered – and more than that, of encountering the God who rescues his people from slavery. (Sometimes
smaller mountains represent surrounding nations over which God reigns from
Mount Zion, raising his own people above them – which is an extension of the
same imagery.) Moses receives his call to set his people free at a mountain,
and later God descends on the mountain to call the people into covenant
relationship with the God who rescued them from slavery in Egypt. Elijah meets
God on the (same) mountain, dejected and resigned and about to be
re-commissioned into God’s plans to deliver his people from evil. Peter, James
and John are caught up in a profound religious experience on the mountaintop, a
vision of Jesus talking with Moses and Elijah, receiving instruction for his
own mission to bring freedom to captives.
In Matthew 17, Jesus descends from the mount of the Transfiguration – this profound
encounter where the voice of God speaks directly to his disciples – and is met
by a desperate father whose son is afflicted by a demon. Jesus delivers the
child of that oppression, and when asked about this by his disciples responds
that dogged, mustard-seed faith can tell a mountain to move from here to there, and it will. In
other words, the kind of faith that has an impact on the world appropriates the
experience of encountering God – as liberator – and brings that with us into
the place where that experience is currently absent but required.
In Luke 17, Jesus says something similar but dissimilar, about faith uprooting a tree
and planting it in the sea. In the Bible, the sea often symbolises chaos that
opposes God – with God regularly defeating the sea by parting it or walking on
it – or (related) barriers that would prevent God’s people from entering into
the fullness of freedom. The context in Luke
17 is forgiveness, with the sea representing the chaos that division results
in, and a tree being the focal-point for both repentance (seeking forgiveness
and reconciliation) and forgiveness (extended, in order that reconciliation
might be experienced). The cross, in the Gospels, and the tree of life in the Revelation of John, would be such trees.
In Mark 11, Jesus brings together the mountain and
the sea, telling his disciples that faith can move this mountain (the this
is important) into the sea. The context is that Jesus has come to Jerusalem for
the final time: within a week, he will be crucified. Staying with friends in
Bethany, on the Mount of Olives across the valley from Jerusalem, he looks
across at the temple mount, synonymous with God’s presence, and speaks of the
need to move this mountain into the sea. The conversation is prompted by Jesus
cursing a fig tree – a symbol of God’s people – for not bearing fruit when he
came to it. The wider context is full of warnings that if the people do not
receive him, it will be too late: the temple will be destroyed. The people as a nation do not repent, and in AD70
the Roman army would destroy the temple, as Jesus had foreseen. The point Jesus
makes about throwing the mountain into the sea is that there is no advantage in
having a place of encountering God if you cannot bring that to bear in the face
of chaos – creating firm ground on which to stand. Indeed, if we do not do
this, we will ultimately lose the experience of encounter we had previously
known.
What, then, has this to do with break-ins and
break-throughs?
We need the mountain-top experiences, but we need
to keep proclaiming the God who sets us free in the dark valleys.
Faith does not guarantee problem-free lives, but
the promise of a covenant-partner who stands with us in the challenges we face,
bringing to bear the resources at his disposal.
If we do not exercise this faith, circumstances
will sweep it away from us.
My immediate response to the break-in was not to
bless the intruder. My immediate response was not charitable. The temptation
was to give free rein to anger, to vengeance, to discouragement – and so to
find myself taken captive by these intruders.
To be honest, yesterday, in the moment, I could not
throw the mountain of my week at New Wine United into the sea of shattered
glass and splintered wood and scattered paper. But today I could. Today, I
could ask God to show mercy on the intruder – and on me. Today, I could call
out to God to come and set me free, that I might bring the goodness of the
kingdom of heaven to bear in the mess.
That is what it looks like to move mountains, to
throw them into the sea. Even to hope for repentance, forgiveness,
reconciliation and restoration.
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