Life in
the Pit
a sermon based on Genesis 37:1-4, 12-28
by Rev. Randy Quinn
I've seen the story several times on the
internet. But when I went to find it this week, it was no where to be
found!
Those who have internet access have probably seen the story. It's
about a farmer who has an old mule. The mule has apparently outlived his
usefulness, but it was too expensive to have him put down.
So the farmer digs a big hole in the ground, throws the donkey in and
proceeds to bury the donkey alive.
From the donkey's perspective, however, the story changes. His master
digs a big hole and throws him in. He isn't sure why, but there is no
way out of this pit he's in. Then some dirt falls on him.
He shakes off the dirt and steps on up.
More dirt comes down. He shakes it off and steps up.
More dirt. More shaking. More stepping.
After enough dirt has been thrown into the pit to bury the donkey,
the donkey is close enough to the top of the hole to step right on out
of the pit.
I've never seen one, but I understand that in ancient Canaan they
were quite numerous – cisterns. Cisterns were bulbous shaped holes in
the ground that were used to catch and store the meager amounts of
rainfall that fall in the desert. The water would then be drawn up as if
it were a well.
That's what made Jacob's well so significant. The water there came
from a spring within rather than the rain that fell.
Joseph is put into just such a cistern. A hole in the ground with no
obvious means of escape.
And it's hard to read this story without identifying with Joseph.
We've all been mistreated at some point in time. We've all found
ourselves caught in tight places with no obvious means of escape.
A few years ago, we were all captivated by the rescue of the coal
miners in Pennsylvania. Do you remember that story?
None of us may have been locked in a pit or trapped in a mine, but we
can identify with the fear and anxiety of the nine men who were rescued
as well as this one obnoxious young boy.
We want to jump to their rescue.
And in so doing, we miss the forest for the trees.
In another popular internet story – which I couldn't find either – is
the story of a small town on the banks of a river where a young man was
rescued from the raging waters. But almost as soon as they had him on
shore, another young man came down the river. Then another. Then
another. And another.
For two entire days the scenario continued to repeat itself.
Some wanted to build a rescue station. Some wanted to train special
swimmers to stand guard in the water waiting for the next victim. Some
wanted to build shelters where the rescued swimmers could recuperate. A
whole industry was about to develop around the rescue operations.
They were focusing on the victims, just like we focus on Joseph or
the miners.
One wise member of the community, however, insisted that the better
means of treating the problem was to send a team upstream to find out
what was causing so many people to fall into the river in the first
place.
Rather than ask what caused Joseph's unwanted tour of the inside of a
cistern – a question that has an obvious answer in the way Jacob
unwittingly created a monster by bestowing special affection toward him
– the question I want to ask is what kind of people Joseph's brothers
are and where are they in today's society?
It might be easy to see ourselves as Joseph – a nation that often
appears to be victimized by the world just because we are successful.
But the harder truth is to see how we are more often like Reuben or
Judah or even Simeon and Asher.
Our thirst for energy put those nine men in the Quecreek mine to
begin with. They didn't really choose to be there, they simply were
pushed into the mine in order to meet our needs. There is a sense in
which our actions led to their crisis.
Some have argued that on the world's stage America is acting like the
spoiled child who deserves to be thrown in the pit – and while I don't
necessarily disagree; I do think the truth is that we have put more
people in the pit than we like to admit.
In a market economy, for instance, we claim to encourage freedom but
in reality we encourage a modern form of slavery by only purchasing the
lowest priced products. Let me suggest two examples, both of which have
local consequences.
In place after place around our country, Wal-Mart has opened its
doors while local businesses have closed theirs. The reason? The people
who live in those towns would rather save a nickel than help put their
neighbor's children through college with those same nickels. Our
pocketbook has made decisions rather than any sense of commitment to
community. And in the end, rather than supporting several small
businesses and their families, we have pushed those same families into
the pits by making them work for minimum wage at Wal-Mart.
Coffee growers in Columbia rarely receive more than 30¢ a pound for
their coffee. And while some of us grumble about paying $3 a pound, many
of us willingly pay $6.88 for a 12 oz package of Starbuck's ground
coffee. For the past year and a half, our Annual Conference has been
encouraging churches to intentionally purchase "Fair Trade Coffee,"
coffee that guarantees the grower $1.26 a pound and is available to us
for $6.95. The truth is we prefer to push coffee farmers into pits along
with Joseph.
(By the way, I use "Fair Trade Coffee" in my office. Stop by some
time and see how good it tastes to help support Columbian farmers!)
Reuben was the oldest son. By tradition and by custom, he should
inherit the mantle of authority from his father. But he thinks he knows
the truth – his father was not the oldest and so he believes that in his
family the oldest will not receive the blessing.
The truth is he WILL receive the blessing. So will Judah. So will
Simeon and Asher and Levi.
You see, God made a promise to Abraham. And in faith, Abraham
accepted and believed the promise to be true. It was a promise that was
to last throughout time.
But with each generation, there was a crisis when it came time to
pass the promise on. Abraham had a hard time passing it on to Isaac.
Isaac had a hard time passing it on to Jacob. Now Jacob is having
difficulty passing on his faith in God's promise to his children.
The same crisis of passing on the faith from one generation to
another is a crisis that continues to be true in the church today. We
have tried ways to address the crisis in the past – through Sunday
School and Youth Groups and college ministries – but the crisis is an
age-old crisis that must be faced by and dealt with in every generation.
In the case of Joseph and his brothers, the crisis seems to have come
in the form of jealousy over who will inherit the promise. It's a
jealousy that appears in many churches today – a jealousy over who will
determine the shape and nature of the church's ministries or what kind
of worship services will be held or how the pastor's time will be
allocated.
Metaphorically Joseph's brothers were the ones in the pit. They
thought there was no way out of their predicament. They saw Joseph as
the favored son and sought a way to be included in the promise by
denying Joseph access to it.
But they overlooked the possibility that all could inherit it. They
didn't see how each one of the twelve brothers could play their own role
in receiving the promise and passing on the faith.
No one of them will inherit God's promises. They will all inherit
them or no one will inherit them.
And maybe that's the message we need to remember today.
The answer to the dilemma of Joseph's brothers does not need to
result in Joseph being thrown into a pit or sold into slavery. The
answer lies in the same place Jacob found an answer in our text from
last week.
The answer lies in the promises of God and trusting God to provide
the answer.
The miners in Pennsylvania almost lost hope when the sound of the
drill stopped. They didn't know – nor could they know – that the bit had
broken off. And as one observer noted, had the drill not broken the
miners may have drowned when the waters were released.
The new drilling operation allowed more time for the water to be
pumped out. And in the end, the longer wait was the safer route.
God was at work, whether they realized it or not.
When we cling to that promise, we can find ways to work with other
people rather than against them. When we recognize that God is working
in our midst, we can allow even the obnoxious "Joseph's" in our world –
or in the church – to find their place as we find our own places and
roles in the Kingdom of God.
Thanks be to God.
Amen.