A New Future is Possible
A Sermon based on 1 Samuel 1:4-10
by Rev. Thomas Hall
Ive always longed
for Americas favorite bumper sticker. It teases me at long traffic lights, stares up
at me at railroad crossings, and haunts me in grocery store parking lots. "This
driver is the proud parent of an honor student at _________ High School." Neither I
nor my parents have ever had the need to invest in such marketing. The best we could do
would be maybe, "Less-than-impressed parents of a C+ student." No matter. I
wouldnt even know where youd get those pre-printed stickers. Do they
automatically come in the mail along with juniors straight A report card? Maybe they
have a black market out there for parents and students who want the crown but not the
cross; who want the sticker but not the aggravation.
I find that same kind of thing in the ministry too. We dont exactly advertise on
our bumpers: "Proud pastor of Huge Mainline Church That Raised $500 at the Church
Bazaar" or anything like that. Just wouldnt be in good taste. It would so long
it would conceal the bumper. But I was recently at a ministerium when the conversation
took an interesting turn. "Yeah," the host pastor announced. "Were
running three services-were bursting at the seams." Well, truth be known, the
only seams the rest of us were bursting was around our waist.
"So," the clergy host continued, "how many are you running in your
church?" "Not fair!" I wanted to yell, but chose not to. I am a church
planter; my congregation is just beginning. In fact, we meet in a tavern and we
havent even had our first bazaar yet. Half-jesting, but truthfully, I said,
"Weve almost got enough to form a full volleyball team." Wouldnt
that look great on the bumper sticker-"Proud pastor of a volleyball team-sized
church." Itll be awhile before we ever show up around the clergy bumper sticker
crowd.
Thats the point. We dont want to hang around the proud parents and
success-story churches and pastors when were not doing well. Especially when we find
ourselves at the opposite ends of the achievement continuum. I know several faithful,
older pastors who find themselves in congregations in which the biggest vision they can
muster is to say no in marvelously creative ways to new opportunities while maintaining
what theyve always done. I know of deep wounds between pastors and churches that are
far beyond conflict managements best resolutions.
I arrived at one church that was absolutely pathetic. The annual report for the
previous year was entitled, Is Anybody Listening? I have never heard such
hopelessness and barrenness as that report had. The question referred to lack of
everything that should be happening in a vital church. Apparently no one was listening to
their prayers-attendance had driveled down to two figures, few families with children
attended, the handful of teenagers had long been driven off by the trustees for using
their skate boards on the empty church parking lot. "We have no insurance," they
had told the boys. But whats that mean to a bunch of kids who just want a place to
skate? The offerings could no longer support a minister. Is anybody listening? "Tired
members of a boring church-everyone welcomed (except skateboarders)" is a bumper
sticker that just doesnt pull em in.
And thats where we enter the text this morning: a place of barrenness, a place
where no one was listening, where no bumper stickers could have expressed national or
personal pride. Like Ruth that we read about last week, Hannah, too, is barren-no child,
no son, no heir, no future, no hope-a place where no one is listening. As you know only
too well, in ancient times children were valued because they extended ones life into
the future. Children were a sign of Gods continued blessing; children, in a sense,
promised immortality-people could live beyond their lifetimes through their children. But
the reverse was also painfully obvious. Women who didnt have children carried the
stigma of Gods curse. Barrenness was a grave, a place to be stuck in, to never have
the joy of passing life on through eternity. Hannah, the Bible says, is barren.
But Hannah is not the only one stuck in barrenness. Israel, too, is barren. The
Philistines have reduced Israel to a marginal existence; they now cower on the edge of the
map of Palestine. Everyone lives in constant fear of being terrorized even when they
harvest their grain. No leader can pull the tribes together. Instead, bully chieftains
clamor to power and manage to rule until the next bruiser comes along and clobbers the
last one. We know of one further place of barrenness: moral chaos and undisciplined
spirituality. The spirituality quest must have been enormous and eclectic-a syncretism
that blended in flavors of Baal, Asteroth, El, and Yahweh. There was no distinctive word
of God for the community. There is barrenness in the land and Hannah reflects that in her
own life.
Barrenness, however, doesnt respect timelines or nationalities. We may spell it
differently, but we face our own barrenness today. I recently listened to an intriguing
interview on National Public Radio between a leader in the PLO and one from the former
Rabin administration. Ten years earlier these two men had worked together on the Oslo
Peace Accord and in the process had become friends. The interviewer replayed a recording
of these early days: "the prospect for peace between our countries is beyond
euphoric!" one of them gushed. The other had invited his counterpart to his country
for coffee-a genuine offer of hospitality. They had hoped to bring fifty years of violence
to a close. Now ten years later-and hundreds of acts of terrorism and suicide bombs,
mines, missiles that had claimed hundreds of children and civilians-these two men were
again being interviewed. When asked what happened to the hope that was "beyond
euphoric," one of the men blamed the other for changing in his position. Then that
blame was flung back to the other side. Didnt take long for people listening to the
program to sigh in the face of untold bloodshed and violence. Doesnt take long to
realize we are still in the same barrenness that we were ten years ago. We cannot have the
child our world so yearns for-peace.
Multiply the greed so recently symbolized by Enron and our inability to rebuild Iraq
and stabilize Afghanistan; add to that our own fractured families where on average we
spend less than ten minutes of quality time with our kids each day, and the seminars that
schools now offering to help families cope with overscheduling and we come to a barrenness
of soul and life.
We dont know everything Hannah went through in her yearning to have a child and
thus to participate in a future. We are spared the personal guilt, shame, and humiliation.
Inspite of her husbands kind words and his valuing of her life, Hannah will not be
comforted. She is alive yet mourns as if dead; Hannah is in such deep anguish over her
barrenness, so painfully aware of her lack and so wounded by the cutting remarks of family
members that she loses her appetite, loses her passion for life. Hannah is barren.
In her barrenness and seemingly hopeless life she worships. "She was deeply
distressed and prayed to the Lord, and wept bitterly," the writer tells us.
Thats not the kind of prayers proud parents nor boastful pastors pray very often; we
cant pray like that when life is good, its all good. But when our bones are
out of joint with desperation, our prayers are one-syllable groans. No time to carefully
arrange words on paper for balance and sound. "Oh God, look at my misery," she
prays. Those words arent all that artful nor particularly creative. But on the lips
of someone like Hannah those words open up new possibilities where none exists. Slobbering
drunk-thats what the priest thought of her act of praying. Shes whining-that
whats her sister-in-law would have taunted. Wasted breath Elkanah may have
remonstrated. But to a barren woman, who spills her misery before God, it is a prayer that
opens a door for God to create a new possibility where none existed.
"To clasp the hands in prayer," Karl Barth once said, "is the beginning
of an uprising against the disorder of the world." Right there in worship, Hannah
begins an uprising against the barrenness that has shriveled her country and her life into
insignificance. Martin Luther described such bold praying as "a continuous violent
action of the spirit lifted up to God." Hannahs prayer is important and it has
an effect with God. As she beats on the doors of heaven to be heard, the door swings open
to a new possibility for God to act in life-giving, life-saving ways. Thats what the
story is about, according to Brueggemann, its about a process through which the
problem of barrenness is transformed into a resolution of glad, trustful, yielding praise.
The chapter ends not with simply a persistent pray-er, but with a powerful, transformative
God who can harness barrenness and turn it into fruitful possibilities.
What about us? Where is God working in our barrenness? Well, I dont even have the
conclusions of all of the stories in my own life and experiences. But this I know from
observing God acting among us. God has taken a church wondering if anybody is listening
and turned it into a vital, caring congregation that now bears a new bumper sticker:
"Proud Members of A Vital Church-Skateboarders Welcomed." God has opened new
opportunities for a church that meets in a tavern to welcome folks that feel uncomfortable
in steepled buildings. Jim came for the first time last Sunday. Had heard about a church
in the tavern. While we were politely eating our cookies and sipping our coffee, my friend
Jim came over with his black and tan-so delighted to worship God and drink beer during the
fellowship hour. He probably wondered why no one else didnt take advantage of this
great opportunity. He is a great candidate for our volleyball team.
Hear the Good News! In Jesus Christ, God is actively bringing fruitfulness into our
barrenness. God may even muzzle barrenness and use it to bring us to a place of honest,
gut-wrenching dependence that takes us way beyond polite circles and stained glass
prayers. Yet the story line is the same as Hannahs. God will change our barrenness
to birth, our vexation to praise, and our isolation to worship. Amen.