Sunday, April 21, 2013

Sermon on Tabitha

My last sermon as an intern. 
 
Community – a Lifeline!   
4/21/13
Psalm 23 Acts 9:36-43 Year C

Last week Pastor Barb spoke from the Gospel of John and mentioned how the two individuals of Peter and John complemented each other in the community of the disciples.  John saw and recognized the Lord first and Peter was the first one to take action and led the group forward.  It took both of them working together in community, to bring the group to the beach to have breakfast with Jesus.  I imagine they would have all arrived there eventually but it is notable that the gospel writer takes the time to define the roles and the mutuality of this group of disciples. 

 In our scripture this morning we see Peter out on his own, away from the other disciples but still doing the work that he saw Jesus doing.  Work that the Holy Spirit empowered Jesus’ disciples to continue as Jesus ascended to the Father and sent the Holy Spirit to dwell with humanity. 

The book of the Acts of the Apostles, which we shorten to Acts, is the continuing story of the lives of the disciples after Christ’s ascension, Pentecost and the beginnings and growth of the church.   Well, mostly it is about the continuing story of Peter with the added dramatic adventures of Paul.  In fact the first part of chapter 9 tells the amazing story of Paul’s conversion.  It makes one stop and wonder why do we have this telescopic look at the amazing conversion story of Paul and then in just a few short verses hone in on a story that takes place in a widow’s small bedroom in the town of Joppa.  It is like standing on the beach and looking out at the ocean liner on the horizon and then looking down and seeing the sand crab at your feet.  How does the significance of the life and work of Tabitha fit into the same chapter as the significance of the life and work of the great apostle Paul?  I wonder, would we even have heard the story of Tabitha had it not been that her life was tied up in the work of the apostle?  But with this account of Peter and Tabitha Luke has given us a beautiful picture of what it means to be community.  And how the greatest and least all work together for the wholeness of the community.

In this town of Joppa, a seacoast town where Jonah boarded the boat to run away from the Lord, is a community of Christians trying to live out their faith in a secular world -- a world of a variety of faiths, a world of exploration and of financial gain, a world of political and spiritual unrest.  Sound familiar?  One of the people we find here is a woman by the name of Tabitha.

We need to remember that Tabitha is a widow and being a widow in this era of history was not an easy life.  Widows were often grouped among those who need special consideration such as the orphans and the poor within a community.  Widows were vulnerable in this society where they had little significance.  Professor Branch compares this vulnerability of widows to Jerusalem in an article where she says,  “Indeed, the poet of the Book of Lamentations captures this sense of vulnerability by using the word “widow” to describe Jerusalem after Nebuchadnezzar razed the city. Gone is her resemblance to a queen; vanished are her protectors, lovers, friends. Slavery, affliction and harsh labor await her in exile.”   But says Branch; widows are often referred to in scripture as a special teaching opportunity for the Biblical authors to present theological insights.  “…  widows can serve as special textual markers to alert readers that something significant is about to happen.”  I think that is what we have here in the story of Tabitha.

   Tabitha lives on the margins of society.  She has no one to protect or stand up for her. Yet Luke describes her as a disciple – the only time in all of scripture that the feminine form of the Greek word for disciple is used.  The only time it is used in all of the New Testament. A disciple of Christ, living on the margins of a secular community has died and the loss of her presence is so keenly felt that the women mourning her death, after preparing her body for burial, place her body in the “upper room” where they gather just one more time.  During this process the community hears that Peter is nearby as the news of his healing of Aeneas in a town just 10 miles away has reached their ears.  Now they decide to call on Peter to come quickly as Tabitha has died. Perhaps they know that Peter will be needed to pastor the mourning friends or perhaps they have hope that Peter will be able to bring their friend back to life.  Either way they are sure of the power of Jesus that is being displayed by this apostle.  They long for a miracle and so they call on all the resources this Christian community has afforded to them.  

This ancient community in Joppa was suffering a great loss in their midst. 
Just as we this very day feel the great loss of the suffering, the illness and death that we are all experiencing  with the cities and surrounding areas of Boston and of West .  As lives are torn apart by fear and devastation; as the suddenness of death marks one day from another  -- there seems little way for us to make sense of all this. Even within our own community as we hear of high school suicides, as we experience life changing and life threatening illnesses , job losses, and the devastation of flooding; we too like that faith community in Joppa yearn for a miracle!
     This community in Joppa lost one of their beloved saints.  Tabitha was not a professional but she served humbly by supplying clothing for the widows of the town. Her good works were probably known not only to this faith community but also to the widows of the wider vicinity of Joppa or at least that may be implied by the fact that we are given her Greek name of Dorcas, as well.  Tabitha did what she could to help heal the brokenness of widowhood.  These women who attended to Tabitha at her death were friends and were broken-hearted at her passing.  This group had been a lifeline for one another.  Even though what brought them together was the give and take associated with clothing there was much more involved in these relationships. And the wider faith community realized the value of these relationships in creating a wholeness of life for these widows.  As a whole community they interceded for the life of Tabitha in their mourning, in their prayers and in their calling out to Peter. 

The fact is that the church needs to be a place of hope and of Easter resurrection – not only on Easter Sunday, but every day.  The season of Easter prepares us and strengthens us to claim that wholeness of life for which Jesus was crucified and resurrected.   We need to claim it for ourselves and then we need to share it with our faith community.  Peter displayed the power of the resurrection for the people in the “church” at Joppa because they were willing to make themselves vulnerable enough to ask Peter for help.  We too have access to that power.  Ephesians 1:28 and following  says, “ I pray that you may now the hope to which he has called you… and his incomparably great power … that same power that raised
Christ from the dead”

 On the fringes of that faith community, within a company of widowed women, Peter walked into a tiny upper room.   Peter heard their stories and saw the fruits of the ministry of Tabitha, and then Peter asked to be alone with Tabitha.  In the presence of the risen Lord, Peter said to Tabitha, “Tabitha get up”.  “Tabitha opened her eyes, saw Peter and sat up,” says Scripture. 
    Peter then presented Tabitha, ALIVE, to her friends, to “God’s Holy people”, scripture says.   And the result, the scripture says, “The word spread throughout Joppa and many put their faith in the LORD” – not in Tabitha, not in Peter but in the LORD!
Do we forget about that?  Do we forget that the result of our caring for one another, even within the context of our own faith community, is a demonstration of the power of Christ?  We would think that as fellow Christians it would be easy to make ourselves vulnerable to one another in a way that would allow for Christ’s healing to be manifested in our own lives together.  We need to be well and healthy within our faith community and then take our God of healing to the hurting world.  To the students who see no way into tomorrow but through suicide, to those hurting in loss of relationships among family members, to those who are aging in a culture that finds little value in old age, to new parents who feel like their days and nights all run together and there is not relief in sight.  Let us work in this Easter time to bring about health in one another, in our committees, in our homes and in our families so that we can be renewed to life through the power of the Holy Spirit that resides in each of us. In that way many will believe and have faith in the risen LORD!

And as we think about the often familiar words of Psalm 23 which we read this morning, we get a beautiful picture of a personal life lived in communion with God, perhaps a life lived by someone like the widow Tabitha. In the book of Acts,  we get a picture of living out that communion with one another.  The community of church, of Christians, our communal life with one another makes a difference in our lives and in the lives of those around us. Community does give us life.  Not that it can always physically resuscitate us from the dead but it can surely feel like that sometimes.  I pray that we can so connect with God that we are filled with God’s goodness and mercy that we can be a lifeline to those within our faith community first and then to a world filled with hurt and doubt; so that God may be glorified and many will come to faith in the LORD!  Amen









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