Patience
is a Virtue
a sermon based on Genesis 29:14a-30
Randy L Quinn
Imagine the setting in which this story
must have been told. Shepherds are gathered around a small fire ring.
The sheep are sleeping securely within their vision – or maybe even
within the confines of a small pen.
There was no Mariner's game on that night, so the radio was turned
off and their eyes turned toward the heavens. While staring at the
stars, one of the elder shepherds begins to tell the story of Jacob.
By the time the story is over, the rest of the shepherds are in
stitches. The quiet summer hillside is alive with the laughter of the
shepherds envisioning this trickster as he is tricked.
And like all good jokes, if we have to explain what's so funny, we'll
never be able to laugh at it.
But most of us miss the humor of the story. Some of what we miss is
in the translation – for the Hebrew is filled with puns that are hard to
translate. Jacob, whose name means "grabby" has made a life of grabbing
what belongs to someone else. Now he grabs a wife only to learn in the
morning that it was the wrong woman.
As the younger of two sons, he works with his mother to acquire the
benefits of being the oldest. Now he meets a man who gives him the older
daughter when he wanted the younger one.
Jacob's father had failing eyesight, so Jacob's mother dressed him in
sheepskin so his aging father would think he was his brother. Now Jacob
is blinded by love; but I'm still not sure how Laban dressed Leah so
Jacob would think she was her sister . . . J
What I do know is the storyteller's irony is evident. In fact, just
yesterday I told this story to someone who didn't know it was in the
Bible and he laughed out loud.
We may not buy into the assumptions about a father literally giving
away his daughter, but we can appreciate the humor of Jacob being
tricked.
But behind the humor we also hear some important reminders about what
is really important in life and how things worth having are worth
waiting for.
Our society has grown accustomed to having things instantly.
When our air conditioner was not working properly, we expected the
serviceman to be waiting at the phone for our call and to walk through
our door almost as quickly as we hung up the phone.
When we eat out, we expect things to happen quickly, too. The food
should be good, but it's almost as important that we don't have to wait
too long before we can eat. When I ate out this week, I was frustrated
that I had to wait to get the ticket from the waitress so I could pay –
rather than enjoying the opportunity for a longer visit.
We know in our minds that "good things come to those who wait," but
we're not very patient.
When we invest money in the stock market, we get antsy if our stock
isn't going up on a daily basis rather than looking at the long-haul and
seeing if the trend is up or down after five or ten or even twenty
years.
In 1997 I came across an article that pointed out the fallacy of
investing in the stock market on a short-term basis and the wisdom of
investing over a long period of time. "Measuring from 1930, stocks were
down 19 years out of 67. That's almost 30 percent of the time. . . . If
we stretch our holding period to three years, stocks were down seven of
64 periods, or 11 percent. Annual returns for 10-year holding periods
after 1939, on the other hand, never had a loss."
I don't know what the recent downturn would do to the numbers, but I
think the message would still be the same – those of us willing to look
long term are more likely to experience gains than those who are looking
for any "get rich quick" schemes.
Putting a little aside on a regular basis might mean fewer luxuries
now, but in the end there is a much greater reward.
Jacob is willing to invest in the long term to gain what he sees as
the best reward. And he finds that time seems to be compressed as he
works for what he truly loves. Jacob is so in love with Rachel that
seven years seems like "only a few days" to him.
How many parents have ever said that about their children? They grow
up so fast. Time becomes compressed and it seems as though one minute
we're buying baby bonnets, the next we're looking at prom dresses.
There are certainly times when we wish things would go quicker.
We look forward to those important milestones of putting the diaper
pail away and storing the high chair. But along with each of those
milestones comes an investment of time in training and teaching. None of
them come easy, none of them come suddenly.
But greater things happen if we keep our focus on the long term goal
of raising our children to be well-adjusted adults. And keeping our
focus on the long term also helps ease the burden of the little crises
that occur along the way.
I'd like to suggest that our faith is that way, too.
Faith doesn't come to us full grown in the middle of the night. Some
people have vivid conversion stories and experiences, but even they do
not come away from it with a mature faith. Faith is a growing adventure.
Investing in our faith is like investing in stocks. There are up
times and there are down times. And if we quit every time there is a
down time, we will never grow.
Investing in our faith is like raising children. If we keep our focus
on the long term, our faith will mature in a healthy way.
We invest in our faith in a variety of ways, most of which take time.
We do what Jacob did while he was working for Laban. We wait. We study.
We give. We work. And we watch as the miracle of faith begins to take
shape and grow in us.
We join a Bible Study or a mission group or a prayer circle.
We begin a regular practice of prayer and scripture reading and
devotions.
We start the habit of making financial commitments to the work of the
church.
We volunteer to teach children or serve dinners or visit shut ins.
We get involved in social services or social justice or both.
And with each event along the way, our faith begins to take shape.
And over time as each event adds to the ones before, we find ourselves
becoming more and more Christ-like. And hopefully, we will find our love
of God growing to the point that we feel like Jacob who thought the
seven years of work were like a few brief days.
What we will eventually become remains a mystery as our lives and our
faith unfolds. Jacob had no idea how the story of his faith would unfold
nor could he comprehend the role that Laban would unintentionally and
unwittingly play in the story of our faith.
I don't want to take away too much from next week's sermon, but there
is a message for us in today's story that becomes clear in next week's
text. Last week, God appeared to Jacob at Bethel. There God is described
as the God of his father and his grandfather (Gen 28:13). After next
week's story, God is described as the God of Jacob as well as Isaac and
Abraham.
Jacob's faith is growing as he works for Laban. A long term
transformation is taking place, one piece at a time.
In this particular story Jacob is humbled. And in his humility he
begins to see how God is at work in his life and in his circumstances.
What he cannot see – and will not become clear for generations – is how
God is at work through this particular story.
Jacob is investing his energy and working for Rachel's hand in
marriage. He is tricked into taking Leah as well. And while Leah appears
to be the innocent victim in the story, God blesses her despite what
Jacob thinks. It's the children of Leah who will be the ancestors of
Moses and David and eventually Jesus.
Fourteen years of working for Laban is a long-term investment that
paid off in ways unforeseen and in many ways unforeseeable. And those
who reaped the benefits of his labor included Laban and Leah as well as
Jacob and Rachel and all of us.
Laban and his friends probably had a good laugh at Jacob's expense
when he took "the wrong wife." But God got the last laugh as Laban
tricks Jacob into fulfilling the promises already made to him before he
was even born.
And as we all know, "he who laughs last, laughs best."
Thanks be to God. Amen. |