The Rev. Josh Shipman
The 5th Sunday after Pentecost, Year C, 2016

Luke 8:26-39

Not long ago,
an article on NPR
gave it a name.

That thing that happened to me

on a drive, the other day.

There I was,

on my way to Bellefonte for a meeting,

enjoying the scenery—

and certainly not speeding.

It popped into my head.
This song:

“You wired me awake
And hit me with a hand of broken nails
You tied my lead and pulled my chain
To watch my blood begin to boil

But I'm gonna break I'm gonna break my
I'm gonna break my rusty cage and run

Yeah I'm gonna break I'm gonna break my
I'm gonna break my rusty cage and run

Too cold to start a fire
I'm burning diesel burning dinosaur bones
I'll take the river down to still water and ride a pack of dogs

But I'm gonna break I'm gonna break my
I'm gonna break my rusty cage and run

Hit like a Phillips head into my brain
It's gonna be too dark to sleep again
Cutting my teeth on bars and rusty chains

I'm gonna break my rusty cage and run

When the forest burns along the road
Like God's eyes in my headlights
When the dogs are looking for their bones
And it's raining ice picks on your steel shore

I'm gonna break I'm gonna break my
I'm gonna break my rusty cage and run

I'm gonna break I'm gonna break my
I'm gonna break my rusty cage and run”[1]

(pause)

An earworm,

I believe that’s what NPR called it.

When you wake up
with that song in your head,

or you’re speeding… er…driving politely

down the interstate,

and that little concert begins to play

in your brain.

So, if you are familiar

with the band Soundgarden,

or if you, like me,

have savored the Johnny Cash version—

you’re welcome for this morning’s earworm.

And whether you know the tune,

and whether or not it’s playing in your head

right now,

you can at least be astonished

at the imagery:

wired,

broken nails,

chains,

rusty cage,

pack of dogs,

cutting teeth,

God’s eyes,

icepick.

It’s been a number of years

since I’ve interpreted literature,

so I’m a bit rusty.

But I would daresay

that this person—be it the writer—

or the “character” of the song,

seems to be suffering.

Is it anxiety?

Is he feeling,

despite much rage,

like a rodent in a cage?

Who knows.

When literature is released

to the general public,

it becomes their property, really.

For me,

the song popped into my head

when I was meditating

on today’s Gospel lesson.

wired,

broken nails,

chains,

rusty cage,

pack of dogs,

cutting teeth,

God’s eyes,

icepick.

Lay that out beside

this list of themes:

homelessness,

clothinglessness

tombs,

shouting,

seized,

guard and bound,

chains and shackles,

demons.

Perhaps our demoniac, today,

would be welcomed

into a reunited Soundgarden—

or some other such band,

something more hardcore

than Vampire Weekend

or the Alabama shakes, surely.

(pause)

He was welcomed nowhere

in his own day.

Without honor,

in his own home.

An unclean thing—

what was Jesus even doing

over in that part of town?

This was Gentile territory—

who else would raise swine,

a food ritually unclean to Jews?

And if being a Gentile wasn’t

unclean enough,

this guy is hanging out

in tombs with dead people.

To the good religious sensibilities

of the day,

shocking,

unfathomable,

filthy.

This man could pollute

a pure person just by

looking at them.

And, yet, we find Jesus

over in this territory.

Imagine if you are traveling

to a sketchy part of town,

we’ll say,

and you’re met

by a naked madman,

screaming at you.

Honestly,

you’d probably hop in the car

and step on the gas.

I would.

Jesus says,

What is your name?

The man,

possessed by so many things,

that he doesn’t even have a name,

says Legion.

One writer notes,

“The name ‘Legion’ has a double meaning.
Literally, it means,

‘Many, thousands, multitudes.’

But it also alludes

to the occupying Roman soldier

legions which numbered

3,000 to 6,000 each.

Many Israelites

felt the Roman legions

were another form

of demonic possession.”[2]

So, we have a statement

of the man’s troubles,

as well as a dig at one of the causes

of those troubles: the occupying force

in the land.

(pause)

Once again, though,

Jesus chooses to

step across physical

and cultural boundaries,

and bring wholeness to this man.

But nobody is amazed

or rejoices at this restoration.

Jesus has upset the

social and economic order.

The swineherders are out of a job.

And the people of the town,

who have for years,

chained this man,

cast him off into cemeteries,

have face him,

have to look him in the eye.

(pause)

My brothers and sisters,

the Kingdom of God,

in its inbreaking,

is not all lollypops,

good times,

and happy clappy music.

It’s dangerous.

It’s unnerving.

We are confronted

with the rusty cages

we construct for ourselves,

our ideologies,

our idolatries,

our very identities, sometimes.

And told to break them

and run.

Jesus does more than

cast demons from this man

into the abyss,

he casts this man out

out of the tombs,

out of his former life,

and into a new role

as chief disciple, chief missioner, if you will,

to the Gentiles.

Who in here

is in need of a casting out?

What rusty cage

are you in need

of breaking free of?

(pause)

In the past week,

in light of the Orlando shooting

that I wrote about in your bulletin insert,

I’ve seen a number of rusty cages,

of chains—especially in the media

and social media worlds.

Partisan politics

Tired old talking points

Blaming the victims

Fear

Idolatry

(pause)

wired,

broken nails,

chains,

rusty cage,

pack of dogs,

cutting teeth,

God’s eyes,

icepick.

(pause)

homelessness,

clothinglessness

tombs,

shouting,

seized,

guard and bound,

chains and shackles,

demons.

Jesus calls us out of all of this.

Jesus calls us into uncomfortable

new horizons in our lives

and in ministry.

But note that the man
made whole by Jesus

didn’t begin an itinerant ministry.

When he asked to follow Jesus,

Jesus told him to stay put,

to minister among his own people.

Our call to ministry

isn’t always a call to move

across the country

or the world.

Sometimes ministry begins

right in our own backyards.

But our call to ministry

is always a call to step

outside of the things that bind us—

the fears,

the ideologies,

the expectations,

anything that would hold us back

from loving fully God

and our neighbor—

and our neighbor is everyone.

We are all called to this ministry.

So,

I’m gonna break,

I’m gonna break my,

I’m gonna break my rusty cage

and run.

Won’t you?

Work consulted:

Bartlett, David L., and Barbara B. Taylor.Feasting on the Word. Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2008., pp 166-171.

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