Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Sermon on Mark 1:9-15 (Lent 1)



The Shaping Wilderness
Growing up I was involved in Boys Scouts which meant I spent quite a few perfectly good weekends out in the wilderness. I would also spend a week out of every summer going to Boy Scout camp. As we got older a few of my fellow troop mates and I began exploring High Adventure options that offered an even more challenging camping experience than the normal “working on merit badges in the safety and comfort of the camp” experience that everyone else had. I remember one experience in particular that shaped me out in West Texas at Buffalo Trails Scout Ranch.
                We had spent the first portion of our week on a fairly easy trail backpacking through the beautiful Davis Mountains seeing the sights and enjoying the fresh air. After about three days, we hiked back into base camp to restock on supplies and then prepare ourselves for the next challenge: the black trail. The black trail wound out of the back of camp and went up to the scenic overlook known as Whiskey Bottle Flat. Now you might be wondering: why such an ominous name for a trail? In the span of only 1.5 miles the black trail takes hikers up an elevation of 1,100 ft! Imagine doing that with a 50lb backpack on your back…you’re essentially crawling up the hill. This trail is not for the faint of heart. It took our group about 5 hours to make it up to the top and onto the flat. Then before we had a chance to set up camp it began to pour down rain on us. We had just enough time to set up some tarps and get ourselves and our gear underneath.
                As it continued to rain we quickly realized that our gear was still going to get drenched because of the water flowing across the ground. As we were desperately tried to block the water from coming underneath the tarp one of our adult leaders, who was an engineer by trade, quickly said “Boys! BOYS! Do not fight the water…you must guide the water.” He began digging a trench that we joined in constructing that moved the water away from our gear so it wouldn’t get completely soaked. As the rain continued and eventually subsided we checked on the trench, added to it and monitored it so that our group and our gear stayed as dry as possible. Don’t fight the water…guide the water.
                When it comes to the wilderness we tend to think of it in our terms. The wilderness is a nice place to visit, but I’d rather not stay there. The wilderness is all those pretty pictures of Yellowstone or some other national park. The wilderness is at camp! The wilderness is okay as long as it has a working bathroom and shower attached to it. I really like the wilderness especially when it includes four wheels, a bed and has my satellite dish attached to it. We have this uncanny ability to really take all of the power and punch out of the wilderness. We don’t fight the wilderness… we crush it utterly with our highly developed brains and technology. Are we really experiencing the wilderness in these times? How often do we let the wilderness guide us?
So maybe that just pertains to the physical wilderness…but what about the mental, emotional or spiritual wilderness? Is it really different? Do we really want to go there either? It’s painful to go there. It hurts. It’s scary. It’s uncomfortable. There’s a chance we might not find our way out or just like the black trail it can escalate quickly. Unlike the physical wilderness we have a harder time shaping these frontiers but they certainly shape us. Maybe you’re stuck in one of these wilderness areas right now wondering when you might get out of it. One course of action might be to simply to ignore it, push it down, act like it’s not happening, work hard to move on but what if you can’t? We’ve all wandered these wilderness areas at some point, how do we find our way out?
In our Gospel for today Jesus travels into the wilderness after receiving his identity in the baptism by John in the Jordan. We’re reminded of the familiar words “You are my Son, the one whom I love. With you I am very pleased.” Then it’s off to the wilderness.  Just so we are clear on this it’s not his love of camping that moves Jesus to go into the wilderness. Actually the text says that the Spirit drives him into the wilderness. The Greek word the Marken writer uses is κβάλλω or literally “to throw”. The spirit picked up Jesus and threw him out into the wilderness. In the wilderness Jesus endures temptation or testing by Satan and even confronts the wild beasts. He’s not alone; we are told that angels waited on him. Jesus then emerges from his wilderness experience shaped and changed. He comes proclaiming a new message, the good news. “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent, and believe in the good news.” The kingdom of God is here, close to us, right here and right now! Turn around! Believe in this good news!
                The story doesn’t end with the wilderness, but with a proclamation of the good news of God’s reign. The powers of the wilderness and the powers of the world do not have the final say. The same is true of our story. Though we may wander in a wilderness that is either physical, mental, emotional or spiritual the good news is that Jesus has wandered there first. We don’t have to fight the wilderness, Jesus has already done that. We are called to venture into the wilderness during this season of Lent. Not to crush it with our highly developed brain, but to sit in ashes and really experience the wilderness. To let the wilderness experience shape and change us so that we can look at and follow the one who is our guide. That’s how we get out of the wilderness. Jesus has been there before and will guide us through. Believe in this good news!
                How is the Spirit throwing you into the wilderness during this Lenten season? How will you respond? Will you fight it or guide it? May we turn around and believe in the good news. May we wander in the wilderness and let it shape us. And may we always remember that Jesus has gone before us into every wilderness place so that he can guide us through it. Amen

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