Monday, June 4, 2012

Ebeneezers

This is a sermon for the Sunday when our congregation honors our high school and college graduates. As they look forward to a new time in their lives, I suspect that they have mixed feelings. (I know I did!) They're ready to leave the past behind, but... what does the future hold? "Ebeneezers" looks at the story of Jacob's dream as a model for recognizing the presence of God in our own lives, even when we don't expect to find it.



I don’t very often build a sermon from a word in a hymn. But this morning, that’s exactly what I’m doing. Some of you may have noticed that my sermon title today – “ebeneezer” – appears in the second verse of today’s opening hymn. (The hymn is “Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing,” and the verse begins “Here I raise my ebeneezer; hither by thy help I’m come.”) You might be wondering just what an ebeneezer is, anyway! An ebeneezer is another word for a stone monument – a pillar that someone sets up so that everyone who goes by can see it. But an ebeneezer isn’t just any stone monument. An ebeneezer is a monument that recalls God’s help in a time of need.

The word “ebeneezer” actually comes from two Hebrew words that mean “stone of help.” “Eben (stone) ezer (help)” – “ebeneezer” – “stone of help.” Jacob set up an ebeneezer like that in this morning’s story from Genesis (28:10-19). But… I’m getting ahead of myself. To fully appreciate that ebeneezer, you need a little bit of background first. It starts with Jacob and his brother Esau.

To say that Jacob and Esau didn’t get along is a major understatement. It would be like saying that the Hatfields and the McCoys weren’t the best of friends. Jacob and Esau took sibling rivalry to a whole new level! As today’s story opens, Jacob is running away from Esau to save his own skin. Esau has threatened to kill him because Jacob stole a blessing from their father Isaac that should have gone to Esau. So Jacob is heading for his uncle Laban’s place at Haran, nearly 500 miles to the north, on what is now the border between Syria and Turkey. It was far enough away that Esau couldn’t get to him; but it was also far enough away that Jacob was leaving his home far behind. Jacob – the son who didn’t like to hunt or herd – the boy who liked to help his mother in the tent – was leaving the only home that he had ever known, heading towards an unknown future.

I wonder how Jacob felt as he stopped to rest on that first night. I imagine that he was frightened and lonely. He certainly didn’t know what to expect on his journey. What kind of dangers would he run into? Would he have to fight wild animals or bandits? When his food and water ran out, would he be able to find more? And, if he arrived at Haran safely, would his uncle accept him; or would Laban send him packing right back where he came from?

If you remember a time when you started a new chapter in your life, I’ll bet that you felt a little bit like Jacob. Maybe you started a new job, or moved to a new city. Or maybe you were a brand new graduate! It’s exciting to be a new graduate… but it can also be scary. Like Jacob, you know what the past was like; but you don’t know anything about what lies ahead. You ask yourself all kinds of questions. Will you be up to the challenges that you meet along the way? Will you meet folks who are friendly and helpful; or will you long for the days of old familiar faces? Will you be a success… or a miserable failure? Oh, yes – leaving the past behind and starting on a journey into the future brings a whole new set of questions!

And Jacob was leaving more than just his home and his family. As far as Jacob knew, he was leaving his God behind, too! In Jacob’s day, everyone believed that gods were territorial. You worshipped the god where you lived! If you lived in southern Canaan, you might worship Baal; but if you lived in Tyre or Sidon or Ur or Haran, you worshipped a different god. Each area had its own god. I’m very sure that Jacob believed that God – his god – had stayed in the home that he left behind. We do that ourselves sometimes. Oh, we know in our heads that God is everywhere and that God goes with us wherever we go. But are our hearts convinced of that? When we move on to a new school, a new place, or a new job, do we expect God to be there with us, too?

I’m not sure that Helen expected God to go with her after her marriage broke up. (Helen isn’t her real name; but her story is true.) When the dust settled after her divorce, Helen moved to another state, and began attending a tiny church near her new home. The church was nothing like the one in which she had grown up. There was hardly anyone her age; the music was pathetic; the preaching had no point that she could find; and they offered no programs to speak of. On the first Sunday that she visited there, she wondered why she had bothered coming. If God was there, he was very well hidden! But something told her to keep coming back. I’ll bet that you’ve already guessed the end of the story. That little church offered Helen a non-judgmental love that literally gave her food when she had none, friends when she needed them, and refuge when she had nowhere else to turn. Every day God helped Helen through the loving church folks who offered what she needed.

On our journeys into the future, we find God in places that we never expect. Jacob had that experience, too. On the very first night of his travels, Jacob had a dream. In that dream, he saw a ladder reaching from earth to heaven, with angels going up and down on it. At the very top of the ladder sat God – the God that Jacob thought he had left behind. And then he heard God’s reassuring words: “I am with you, and will watch over you wherever you go; and I will bring you back to this land.” When Jacob woke up, he set up the ebeneezer that began my sermon – Jacob’s stone of help. He set it up to commemorate God’s presence with him when he least expected it. He had felt lonely and frightened and uncertain… and now, with God’s help, he was reassured, secure, and confident. “Surely,” he said, “surely the Lord is in this place, and I never even knew it.”

I don’t know if Jacob’s ebeneezer is still standing in Israel. But do I know that there are plenty of other monuments that witness to the God who appears to offer help when we least expect it. One example is the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, what we now call the Dome of the Rock. According to Jewish tradition, it marks the site where Abraham attempted to offer Isaac as a sacrifice, but was stopped by God himself who substituted a ram for the sacrifice. A second example is the church in Lourdes, France. Just over 150 years ago, a young girl in Lourdes saw a vision of the Virgin Mary there. From that time to this, the water in its grotto has been associated with miraculous healings. Much closer to home is St. Paul’s Episcopal Chapel in New York City. St. Paul’s stands directly across the street from the former location of the Twin Towers. On 9/11, it miraculously escaped destruction when the towers collapsed. It became a place of refuge for firefighters and police officers who were offered hot food, warm beds, and trauma counseling, in addition to as many prayers as they needed. It remains a place of witness to God’s presence with us, even in disaster.

Jacob’s story is actually our story, too. It happens over, and over, and over again: we turn our faces to the future; we leave our past behind; and we step out, not knowing what we will find. When we travel through unfamiliar places, it’s hard to sense God’s presence with us. But then, something happens – and we realize that, even when we didn’t feel it, God has been there with us all along.

And so, I have some advice for all you graduates this morning. You may be graduating from college, from high school, from junior high school, from kindergarten, or just from another year of life – my advice is the same for all of you. Don’t worry about the future! Step out with courage! Don’t be afraid of the tough times – and there will be some. During those times, it might feel like God is a million miles away! But he won’t be. One day, like Jacob, you’ll look back at those times, and you’ll be amazed! You might even put up an ebeneezer. Because on that day, you’ll say, “Oh, my gosh! God was right there with me all the time!”

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