Parents bring children into the world for many reasons. They do it to participate in the process of birth and to experience parental love. They do it because they believe in the institution of the family. They do it because they affirm human life – its rhythms and seasons, its rites of passage. They do it, even, to enter more fully into the unfolding of history, in acknowledgement of their forbears and in perpetuation of that which they achieved and that for which they sacrificed. Parents bring children into the world for all these reasons, which take on added validity once the child is born.
But at the same time, parents bring children into the world amidst the uncertainties of life They bring children into the world vulnerably, knowing the risk the uncertainties of life pose to the one now most precious to them. They bring children into the world in hope, but also in fear. This becomes all the more pronounced in times of heightened danger, like the times in which we now live, and the time in which parents in Jesus’ day lived.
In Jesus’ day, Palestine had been annexed by the Roman Empire, and the Jews lived as an occupied people. They had much to fear from their Roman masters. These were times when a great prophet could be imprisoned for criticizing a Roman regent, and beheaded as the result of his careless boast. These were times when rebels against Rome hung on crosses as deterrents to other rebels.
And they had much to fear too even from within their own ranks. For occupancy, despite such deterrents as crosses, brews rebellion, and rebellion continued to brew. In another generation the Jewish people would rise up against the Roman Empire, and the Roman Empire would put the down with annihilating vengeance.
But into those time of heightened danger, a religious leader had arisen, a religious leader like no other who had ever arisen before. He taught what was hard and strange, but perhaps for this very reason, his teaching rang true. He exposed corruption with deadly accuracy and unquestionable certainty. He even commanded miraculous powers, but used them never self-interestedly, but only in service to others, most of whom were deemed of negligible significance. There was indeed something uniquely authentic and authoritative about him, but at the same time, something strangely recognizable about him, as truth is strangely recognizable, and justice, and greatness; and the people loved him.
What could have been more natural than for parents to bring their children to him for his touch? Granted, they themselves were probably scarcely sure of what, in so doing, they sought from him. The less sophisticated among them, though, to be sure, not less sophisticated in their love for their children, doubtless hoped that his touch would protect their children from the uncertainties of life, like a talisman of sorts.
But there were surely those among them of greater sophistication, who sensed better the difference between faith and magic. They doubtless hoped that his touch would impart something of himself to their children, something in which they could abide, something to comfort, bolster, and guide them precisely amidst the uncertainties of life – that there are indeed holy men of God, who all but prove God’s promises to be true.
Little could any of them have known, however, the extent to which Jesus would exceed all that they sought from him – that he would in his death and resurrection overrule the uncertainties of life and prepare an eternal home for their children with him
But as parents so naturally brought their children to Jesus for his touch, they were turned away, and sternly, and by Jesus’ own disciples. When Jesus saw what his disciples were doing, he grew indignant. And if one wants to know really got to Jesus, one only need look at what made him indignant – the recalcitrant hypocrisy of a mob that would stone an adulterous, the spiritual dullness of those with neither the eyes to see nor the ears to hear, religious authorities who sought their own aggrandizement in Gods name, and disregard for children.
And in his indignation, Jesus rebuked his disciples, “Let the little children come to me, do not stop them, for it is to such as these that the Kingdom of god belongs. Truly I tell you, whoever does not receive the Kingdom of God as a little child will not enter it.”
Jesus’ words recognize that children are possessed of certain qualities – spontaneity, frankness, wonder, joy, and most important, I think, dependency – dependency that looks in simple trust to their parents for all that they receive. And for these qualities, children are predisposed to be citizens of the Kingdom of God.
But his words recognize too that those in whom these qualities over the years have rigidified into hard hearted officiousness, though they call themselves disciples, are in fact ill disposed to be citizens of the Kingdom of God; indeed will not enter the Kingdom of God unless they recover the very qualities they would admonish.
But Jesus’ words recognize more still. If children are predisposed by the qualities of which they are possessed to be citizens of the Kingdom of God, this recognizes too that children are capable of receiving what the kingdom of God has to offer them – faith and hope, meaning and purpose, comfort and peace, and Jesus’ promise of eternal life.
And in like manner, Jesus’ words to his disciples hold more than a warning against impeding children form the Kingdom of God. If children are possessed of qualities that predispose them to be citizens of the Kingdom of God, and they are capable or receiving what the Kingdom of God has to offer them, this recognizes that it is ours not merely to refrain from impeding the from the Kingdom of God, it is ours to usher them in. And not only the children of our families and our congregation, but all children, especially those we know would occupy a special place in Jesus' heart – those who are neglected, forgotten, misunderstood, hurting, and afraid. It is ours to let them feel the touch of Jesus, that we may, amidst the uncertainties of life, reassure both children and their parents of Jesus’ promises to them. Amen.