In the wake of the release of the blockbuster movie: Avengers: Endgame
I’ve noted three distinct modes of response. The first mode of response includes people who have never paid any attention to any of the Avengers movies released over the last ten years and aren’t about to spark an interest now. They are supremely indifferent.
The second mode of response includes people who jumped on the bandwagon late in the day. The hype is such that they don’t want to miss out, so in preparation they perhaps went back and watched Black Panther or Infinity Wars so they would not appear total green horns. They are cousins of fair weather fans.
The third mode of response involves people who are hard core. They have seen most if not all of the twenty plus Avenger movies, many several times. They counted the days until the movie came out, and to pass the time while they waited they ranked their favorite Avengers in order or they hypothesized as to how Thanos would meet his demise.
My son Herry and I fall into the third mode of response. I actually pulled Herry out of school so we could see it the Friday morning it came out. My note to his school offered no apologies. “Dear Attendance Office,” I wrote. “Herry will not be in school on Friday. He is not experiencing flu-like symptoms. Rather, we are watching the first performance of Avengers: Endgame. I am hopeful you will excuse his absence.”
I never imagined I would be the type who would be into these kinds of films. Herry, yes...me, no. They are about as cerebral as a roller coaster ride. But I think I like them so much because the superheroes and villains are pure, unalloyed distillates of good and evil. And we always know where lies the victory. I guess in the last analysis, I like them so much because they are pure escapism.
Because let’s face it. There are no pure and unalloyed distillates of good and evil out there. That’s not our reality. Our reality is more ambiguous. We still know where lies the victory, but the way it plays out is more murky. Take Moses for instance. When God called him he was, to put it bluntly, not particularly into God. Why would he be? He was raised by Pharaoh’s daughter. Ergo, she was an Egyptian. We can presume she did not send him to rabbinical school. As for his countrymen who were in slavery, they were in no position to maintain any religious formation. They were just trying to stay alive. Why would he be into God? No one had introduced him.
At any rate, Moses’ position in Egypt became untenable. Imagine your countrymen enslaved and you living in the lap of luxury; in effect colluding with the enemy. That wasn’t going to end well for him, and it didn’t. Moses ended up fleeing for his life, but he landed on his feet. He found a wife, had a son, and got a job working for his father in law.
Yes, Moses might not have been into God, but God was into him. Moses was minding his own business one day when suddenly a flaming bush appeared before him and from it boomed the thunderous voice of God; “I have observed the misery of my people who are in Egypt; I have heard their cry on account of their taskmasters. I have come down to deliver them from the Egyptians, and to bring them up out of that land to a good and broad land, a land flowing with milk and honey…..So come, I will send you to Pharaoh to bring my people, the Israelites, out of Egypt.”
Moses looked around to see who it was that God was addressing in this fashion. There was no one there but him. “You mean me?” He asked. “Yes,” God continued, unperturbed. “I mean you.” “Are you positive?” Moses asked. God continued, unperturbed. “Fear not! For I will be with you.” God tried to continue with his lofty pronouncements, but Moses stopped him. “Forgive the interruption,” he said. “What if no one goes along with this gambit of yours?” God continued unperturbed. He gave Moses three signs that would insure his gambit’s success - a snake that could turn into a staff, a hand that could turn leprous, and water that could turn into blood.
At this point, Moses began to sweat. “God’s armed me with a rabbit and a hat,” he thought to himself. “He’s setting me up for failure.” He started wiggling harder and harder to get off the hook. “Look God,” he said, “in case you haven’t noticed I trip over my tongue every time I open my mouth. You really think someone who stammers and stutters has creds in a situation such as this?” God continued unperturbed. “Not to worry,” he assured Moses; “I myself will put the words in your mouth.” At this point Moses was through negotiating. He downright refused. “Talk to the hand, God, because it’s not happening.” God finally grew perturbed, and Moses lost the showdown.
This is how it all started. This is not exactly the stuff of Iron Man and Captain America. Talk about ambiguous. Talk about murky. And the tiger didn’t change his stripes, so the sailing was not smooth. Moses returned to Egypt grudgingly whereupon his intervention got the slaves into trouble with their Egyptian overlords. If you’re a slave, it’s a good day when you merely toil all day. It’s a bad day when your quota is increased and you’re beaten because you don’t make it. As the slaves yelled at Moses, Moses yelled over his shoulder at God that this was proof positive that he could not get the job done because he was not the man for the job. God sent, via Moses, ten plagues with which to afflict the Egyptians and wear down their resolve, and Moses and the slaves were finally able to make their getaway, but then the road trip to the Promised Land was hell on wheels. You think Moses complained, you should have heard the people. But at the end of the day Moses did exactly as God had called him to do. He delivered his people from Egyptian slavery. No, he wasn’t the stuff of superheroes, but he got the job done.
Amidst the ambiguity. Amidst the murkiness. Despite himself. Despite the people. Despite the discord. Despite the mishaps. Despite the setbacks. Despite the mistakes. Despite the disappointment. Despite the frustration. Despite his attitude. Despite his inexperience. Despite it all. He persevered. He kept at it. He kept going -- step by step, moving in the right direction. And he got the job done.
And when he did, the ambiguity became just a bit less ambiguous. The murkiness became just a little bit less murky. There was a bit of order where there was once just chaos, a bit of formation where there was once just dissolution, a bit of clarity where there was once just confusion. He got the job done. So maybe he was the right man for the job after all.
And Moses was no solitary case. By no means. Abraham, Issac, Jacob, Joseph, Joshua, Samuel, Saul, David, Hosea, Jeremiah, Isaiah. It was just the same with them all. Oh, and the disciples. We must not forget them. Theirs was a worst case scenario. The one true thing that Peter said was, “Depart from me Lord, for I am a sinful man.” Yes he was. He was a sinful man. But the Lord did not depart from him. He knew that despite his brashness, despite his impulsivity, despite his cluelessness, despite his weakness, despite his faltering, that he would get the job done, that he was the right man for the job.
He knew what they all teach us here this morning -- that God does not call the equipped, God equips the called. That means that we can get the job done. That means that we are the right men and women for the job. So let’s get to it. Amen.