Perspectives From Africa
Perspectives from Africa
Sermon
preached by the Rev. Lowell E. Grisham, Rector
St.
Paul's Episcopal Church, Fayetteville, Arkansas
August
11, 2013; 12 Pentecost, Proper 14, Year C
Episcopal
Revised Common Lectionary
(Luke 12:32-40)
Jesus said to his disciples,
"Do not be afraid, little flock, for it is your Father's good pleasure to
give you the kingdom. Sell your possessions, and give alms. Make purses for
yourselves that do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no
thief comes near and no moth destroys. For where your treasure is, there your
heart will be also.
"Be dressed for action
and have your lamps lit; be like those who are waiting for their master to
return from the wedding banquet, so that they may open the door for him as soon
as he comes and knocks. Blessed are those slaves whom the master finds alert
when he comes; truly I tell you, he will fasten his belt and have them sit down
to eat, and he will come and serve them. If he comes during the middle of the
night, or near dawn, and finds them so, blessed are those slaves.
"But know this: if the
owner of the house had known at what hour the thief was coming, he would not
have let his house be broken into. You also must be ready, for the Son of Man
is coming at an unexpected hour."
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Note:
This sermon was preached at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church where Lowell
supplied for Pastor Clint.
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've thought a lot
about possessions during this past week.
For five days I lived among people who have few possessions. And yet, living among them, I experienced the
presence of the Kingdom that God promises to give us.
Last week I lived
in a Maasai village in Kenya. My home,
shared with two others, was about ten feet by ten feet, barely taller than my
head, made of sticks and limbs, plastered with a dried mixture of mud and cow
dung. It was dark, except for a few
small openings and a little LED solar lamp.
In a separate
stick house was the guest latrine, two porcelain potties over an earth-dug
pit. Each morning a villager would start
a fire to heat water for their guests' hot shower in the latrine hut.
On our second day
we were invited to our neighbor's home two cottages over to see a typical
family arrangement. The dung hut had a
little bigger footprint, maybe 15 by 15 feet.
There was a small area for a cooking fire, about four feet square. The smoke from the little fire stung my
eyes. On either side of the fire were
bed mats -- father on the left, mother on the right. Three children slept with their parents and
the two smallest slept on the floor in between.
At the foot of the mother's bed was an L-shaped stall where fifteen
goats and two young calves stayed inside with the family each night, safe from
predators. Earlier that morning I had
watched a mother cow released from her night enclosure walk to that door and
moo until the family opened up to let her calf come to nurse.
Each day village
women walk to a creek about a hundred yards away or to a pump some further
distance to bring water. The women milk
the cows and do all of the cooking. They
also fetch the firewood. The women are
responsible for all of the construction and upkeep of their buildings. After the cattle pen was emptied one morning
I watched a woman collect dung for patching the roof and sides of her
home.
On one of our
mornings in the village, the women in our group helped with the tasks of
carrying water and chopping sticks for fire and building. During the day the
village women make necklaces and bracelets, and some go to sell their crafts at
the nearby gate to the Maasai Mara Game Preserve. Before and after school, the young girls help
with all of these things.
The men and many
boys are in charge of the cows, sheep and goats. Some stay up all night by a fire guarding the
flock inside an enclosure of sticks.
They also protected us, especially the night when elephants roamed our
camp. Each day other men and boys take
the flocks up the nearby mountain to graze and return them at evening. They carry with them neither food nor water
during their day's work.
Wealth in the
village is measured by cows. One
villager asked one of our group how many cows he owned. The other villager with him was embarrassed
by the impolite question, the equivalent of asking "How much money do you
have?" They have little or no
money. It costs a man 10 cows to become
engaged to a bride. Our 23 year old
guide has 4 cows. It will be a while
before he can afford to marry.
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o electricity, no
plumbing, no TV, no cars; but many cell phones.
I could go on about what they don't have. But let me say something about what they do
have.
The people of
this village have a deep sense of community.
They know that they belong to something greater than themselves. They belong to that place -- to the land, its
animals and resources. They belong to
their tribe. They have a deep sense of
identity, of knowing who they are and what they will be doing with their lives
-- lives that are deeply interconnected -- meaningful and purposeful. You get no sense of anxiety among them about
what they should do or who they should become.
One of our hosts,
Angela, will forever become for me an icon of the meaning of the word
"joy." Angela was responsible
for our meals. Whenever she arrived she
greeted us with an effervescent smile and a song-like voice -- "Good
morning!" "Good
evening!" "Did you sleep
well?" "How are
you?" She spread joy simply, as an
expression of her being.
Angela is also
the teacher for the youngest children of the village. We visited her class,
where she uses joyful songs to teach things like the alphabet, the days of the
week, the months of the year, and basic math.
Their learning was like play. One
evening when we told Angela how much we enjoyed visiting her class, she sang
joyfully, "I love my children, and they love me." Her face beamed.
Before dawn one
morning I encountered Angela picking coals from the evening's fire and placing
them into a small tin fire-starter. She
asked me, "Do you have something like this for your cooking?" I thought of my fancy Green Egg grill and
said somewhat falsely, "Yes, I do."
Angela and the other women wash clothes on the rocks in the creek and
dry them on the bushes. Someone in our
group told her about washing machines and dryers, and showed her a
picture. "And for dishes?" She
asked. "Yes, a machine for that
too." Angela smiled and shook her
head, perplexed over such things.
We wondered how
she had the time to build fires, gather water, cook and serve our meals, clean
the dishes and cookware, and teach a full day at school. She made me think about all of the
conveniences we take for granted -- plumbing and water that is safe to drink,
washers, dryers, ovens, stoves, dishwashers, paved roads and cars.
I came home more
thankful.
I
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t strikes me that
so many of these things are conveniences to save us time. How long it takes Angela do to the same
things that we do. Yet why do so many of
us always seem so rushed and so short of time?
Why do we feel anxious over whether we can get everything done that we
think we ought to do? We are a busy and
rushed people.
Time seems
different in Africa. Africans don't seem pushed and stressed to do, and to do
so quickly. They don't seem pressured by
time. Even the walk of the Maasai has a
slow, dignified grace.
Our main host was
a Maasai community leader, James Ole Lesaloi --(jplsemadep@gmail.com). Our group learned about his
safari-plus-cultural experience project through the "Responsible
Travel" website. James offers
discount safaris of the famous Maasai Mara and uses the income to address many
of the needs of the Maasai people.
We saw a water
well that his non-profit has installed.
It serves ten villages with water that is cleaner and more dependable
than the creeks. We visited his school
with more than 1,000 students, 600 of them as boarders. The school can teach, board, feed, and give a
uniform to a student for only $210 a year, a price beyond many Maasai families,
so John provides many scholarships. They
need scholarship sponsors.
We visited John’s
new rescue mission for girls whose families would otherwise sell them into
polygamous marriage by age 14 to men much older. John's non-profit has established a Community
Health Center with diagnostics, treatment, drugs, hospital beds and simple
surgeries for basic health care and for the myriad of accidents and illnesses
that afflict the people -- malaria, typhoid, HIV, measles, and more. He's hoping soon to develop a videoconference
link that will allow doctors to consult on cases from a distance. John's most recent project is a computer lab
donated and installed by Cisco.
When I read
today's gospel encouragement to "give alms" I thought immediately of
John's development organization as a worthy subject of my giving. Being with him and his people challenges me
to think differently about my possessions -- my privilege, my wants, my needs.
We live a life of remarkable material privilege here in the U.S. But sometimes we live with exaggerated anxieties
-- exaggerated needs.
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wouldn't want to trade places with John or
with Angela. I feel fortunate to live in
this privileged land. But coming home
again reminds me of what I am most deeply thankful for.
Jesus said,
"Where you treasure is, there your heart will be also." My real treasure is the people in my life --
the relationships of love and friendship.
The network of family and community where I belong and have a sense of
identity and place and meaning. A
network of relationships with the divine living mystery of God, especially as
God is incarnate in Jesus, and in all humanity, and in the communities who
embody God's Spirit. These relationships
are the unfailing treasures which no moth can destroy.
These are the
treasures of the kingdom of God.
It is "the
Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom," Jesus tells us. This past week I have experienced that
kingdom fresh and alive among neighbors who have few material treasures. And they have reminded me of what is truly of
value. They invite us in the West to
live with less attachment to our possessions, and with a lighter sense of
time. They invite us to share and to
give, for we have more than our share of things.
They invite us to
embrace the true treasures of relationship and community, and to celebrate our
deepest identity as God's beloved children.
As God's children, we thrive most deeply when we simply love God and
love our neighbor as ourselves.
So, "do not be afraid, little flock, for it is your Father's good
pleasure to give you the kingdom... Make
purses for yourselves that do not wear out...
For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.”
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__________________________________________
The Mission of St. Paul's Episcopal Church is to explore and
celebrate
God's infinite grace, acceptance and love.
For information about St. Paul's Episcopal Church and its life and
mission, please contact us at
P.O. Box 1190, Fayetteville, AR 72702, or call 479/442-7373
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