30 July 2017

A17 Sunday 30 July 2017




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Proper 12: 8th Sunday after Pentecost

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1 Kings 3:5-12

At Gibeon the Lord appeared to Solomon in a dream by night; and God said, “Ask what I should give you.”  And Solomon said, “You have shown great and steadfast love to your servant my father David, because he walked before you in faithfulness, in righteousness, and in uprightness of heart toward you; and you have kept for him this great and steadfast love, and have given him a son to sit on his throne today.  And now, O Lord my God, you have made your servant king in place of my father David, although I am only a little child; I do not know how to go out or come in.  And your servant is in the midst of the people whom you have chosen, a great people, so numerous they cannot be numbered or counted.  Give your servant therefore an understanding mind to govern your people, able to discern between good and evil; for who can govern this your great people?”  It pleased the Lord that Solomon had asked this.  God said to him, “Because you have asked this, and have not asked for yourself long life or riches, or for the life of your enemies, but have asked for yourself understanding to discern what is right, I now do according to your word.  Indeed I give you a wise and discerning mind; no one like you has been before you and no one like you shall arise after you.”

On these Green Sundays in between Pentecost and Advent we have the option between two Old Testament readings.  Today I want to tell you about the other reading, the one we have not heard.  This reading focuses on King Solomon.

Today I want for us to consider King Solomon, the son chosen by King David to succeed him in leadership of the people of God.  At some point following the transition of the throne, God comes to Solomon in a dream.  In the dream, God asks: "What shall I give you?"

Can you imagine what this moment must have been like for Solomon?  I dare say it's hard for us all to imagine such a moment in which God is willing to give whatever we desire.  We are told that Solomon responds to God in such a way that he refers to himself as "a little child."  There were indeed times when new kings who followed in the footsteps of their father to become king were indeed children.  Such does not apply to Solomon.  He is a grown man.  The fact that he refers to himself before God as a child shows that this king has humility, especially before God.  In that humility, the King asks for "an understanding mind able to discern between good and evil."

The Scriptures tell us that God delighted in Solomon's response.  This should not surprise any of us.  The desire of this king is indeed good, and how we long to see in those who are in leadership in our own generation the wisdom and humility of Solomon.

But, my friends, the combination of wisdom and humility ought not be desirable only in those who are in positions of high authority and leadership.  If we make this our desire for others, the story of Solomon becomes an instrument of praise for some and condemnation of others.  What's missing in that approach?  The missing piece is the effect of the Word of God on us individually.

Certainly, this scripture is intended for us all.  All of us, in the various roles and relationships we share with others, need to be filled with humility that leads us to know what we know and what we don't know as well as the wisdom to say and do the right thing, especially when that right thing is to say and do nothing, to be present to listen rather than to speak.

Are we bold enough like Solomon to ask God to grant unto us the gift of wisdom?  Make no mistake about the fact that this is a prayer that will delight God's heart.  The Scriptures show this clearly.  God delighted in Solomon's request and granted that request joyfully.  Here we find for us a gracious invitation.  In these words of Scripture, we find a promise from God that if we are bold like Solomon, God will hear and grant our request with delight.

This all sounds wonderful, doesn't it?  The appointed reading for this Sunday ends here, with God delighting in the request of Solomon.  But here is where things get interesting.

I have often heard it said, and have repeated it a time or two, that the most commonly prayed prayer is this: "Lord, give me patience, but give it to me right now."  When we ask things of God, we often do so without considering how God might respond to our request.  When we do, we are tempted to tell God how to respond.  It makes us uneasy that sometimes God makes us wait when we have prayed.  We become anxious when God responds to our prayers for the help of others by sending us to be the helper to those whom we have lifted up to God for help.  The Church prays for God to raise up bishops, priests, deacons, monks and nuns, faithful lay people, committed to serving the Gospel and loving others with the love of Christ.  And let me assure you personally that when I began discerning the call to the priesthood, it scared me more than words can express.  Oh how I tried to do my best impersonation of Jonah and run away.  There is a reason for the often-repeated line: "Be careful for what you pray; you might get it."

And yet there is a better way of wording the sentiments of that popular comment.  Our focus shouldn't be so much on "you might get" what you have requested of God in prayer.  Instead we should say: "Be careful for what you pray; you might need it."  And if God grants the request, go back and change "you might need it" to "you will need it, and soon."

God delights in Solomon's request for wisdom and grants that request.  In the very next verse, Solomon wakes from sleep.  The King goes immediately to the Temple to offer sacrifice in thanksgiving for the gift granted in the dream.  And in the very next verse, while the King is yet in the Temple worshipping God, the gift granted becomes the gift needed.

Two women who lived together were both with child at the same time.  Both delivered sons at around the same time.  One night, while sleeping, one of the women awoke and noticed that her son who slept at her side was dead.  She had accidentally smothered him as they slept.  She rises, takes the dead child and places it next to the other woman, then takes the living child as if he were her son.  In the morning, when the other woman awoke and got past the initial shock of the dead child, she observes that this dead child is not her son.

The women both lay claim to the living child.  They are brought before King Solomon for his judgment in their case.  After hearing them out, the King asks for the living child and a sword.  He orders that the living child be divided in half by the sword, and that each woman be given a half of the child.

One woman agrees and calls this fair.  The other woman pleads for the life of the child and asks the King to give the child alive and unharmed to the first woman.  And how does Solomon the Wise respond to the request of the later woman?  The King orders that the child be given unharmed to her who was willing to give him up in order to protect the child.  By her sacrifice, Solomon is convinced that she is the mother of this child and that she is the one who has told the truth.

Those who witnessed this decree perceived that the King showed wisdom and discernment.  They offered praise to God for these divine gifts.  We join them today.  We long for such wisdom.  We pray that God will raise up persons in our own day who are filled with the wisdom, humility and discernment of God to know and to say and do what is right and good and which builds up the Kingdom of God.  Only be careful, for once we have so prayed, God might just tap us on the shoulder and send us in response to our prayers.  And should God do so, never fear.  God gives us what we need, and when we need it.  Therefore, we need not become anxious. Rather, like Paul, we can say: "I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me."


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Father Timothy Alleman
Rector of The Church of the Holy Cross

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