Isaac and the Wells (Genesis 26)
All through the Bible, there is this theme of the refugee. Abraham
and Isaac and Jacob and his descendants spend a lot of time wandering. They
spend a lot of time moving from place to place. They spend a lot of time as
refugees. And sometimes as slaves.
In our story this morning, Isaac finds himself and his
family living as strangers and even as refugees in the land of the Philistines,
the area now known as Gaza. They are afraid. They eventually get kicked out. And
then their water supply gets vandalized.
God is concerned
about basic needs
You know, the Bible is almost always about real things. In
the Christian tradition, we often talk a lot about spirit and soul. We tend to
want to spiritualize things. But, the Bible rarely does that.
God’s promises are usually always about concrete things.
Water. Land. Safety.
God promises to give a homeless family land.
God is invested in people and animals having enough water.
God cares that Isaac’s actions put Rebecca in danger.
In my life and in my work, I think a lot about things like
land and food and water and a safe place to sleep.
Right now, I’m working with an encampment on the Chehalis
River of about 50-60 people. They are camping close to where people camped last
year. Some of them have been displaced from hotels that have shut down. Some of
them are there just because there is nowhere to go.
A few guys from the camp went to city hall last week and
told city council that the hundreds of people who find themselves homeless in
Aberdeen had no access to water or sanitation. According to DSHS, about 750
people in Aberdeen (around 70 in Montesano, by the way) are homeless or nearly
so. They were asking the city to work with them to find solutions.
"What are you doing right now? Where do we go to the
bathroom? Where do we shower? These are the things on our minds every day...
Basic needs need to be met."
I am always struck by people’s courage in showing up and
fighting for each other for basic human rights. And I am always reminded, that
in the wealthiest country in the history of the world, we have millions of
people who do not have access to basic needs like water on a very hot day.
But most of all, when I read this passage in light of my
week, I think about how God is invested in struggles like these. God cares
about whether or not you have water. God cares about whether or not you have
food or a place to sleep. Or if you are safe.
God cares if people
have safety and dignity
I keep wondering what it must be like for Rebecca. Here she
is, a refugee in a strange land. And her husband is so afraid that he puts her
at risk and basically is willing to throw her under the bus and trade her
safety for his own. This happens to women all over the world pretty often.
I think about so many people when I read this story. I think
about the woman I met on the US Mexico border who jumped trains from El
Salvador to make it across the border. She was assaulted. She also fell off the
train as it was moving at one points, cutting a deep gash through her leg.
I think about the myriad of women I know across the country
who have ended up on the streets or couch surfing because they lost a job or
they ended up in prison or they just could never find a job in the first place.
I think about the young Palestinians who live—right now—where
this story took place, in Gaza, where they are living in tents on piles of
rubble.
In the years after the story we are looking at today, God
lays down laws for his people. And one of them is this: In Leviticus 19:34
“You shall treat the stranger who sojourns with you as the
native among you, and you shall love him as yourself, for you were strangers in
the land of Egypt: I am the LORD your God.”
God has special care for people who are displaced. For
refugees. For economic refugees. For the dispossessed. For the scared and the
suffering. For the vulnerable and the alone.
This camp that I mentioned earlier: they have been given
until today to vacate the property. Bulldozers are supposed to come this
afternoon. The people living there are people who once were supervisors at
sawmills. The people living there are young women who have been forced out of
hotels and are trying to find a little safety in the bushes. The people living
there are young men who may have just been released from jail but who can hold
a prayer meeting that would bring you to tears.
Just a couple of weeks ago, a few guys from town went down
to this camp and starting bashing tents and calling people names. It was a
classic case of “bum bashing.” One of the women I know well was sleeping alone
in her tent when they came by, in the middle of the night. They broke her tent down,
kicked her little puppy, and told her, in language I will not repeat here, that
she needed to “get off the river, get out of town.”
We like words like that these days. “Go back where you came
from.” “Get off this place or that.”
God, however, says differently. Love the stranger as
yourself. Remember you were once refugees.
This is really personal for me right now. I just drove
across country and, as I did so, I visited the little town in Alabama where my
great grandpa was born. During the great depression, that whole side of the
family moved—with thousands of others—from the deep South to California,
looking for work, looking for a better life. Some of them found it, some did
not. My great grandpa died in an old hotel and no one found his body for days.
God cares that people
have somewhere to live and belong
When God meets Isaac as homeless wanderer in a strange land,
the promise God gives is the promise of land. The promise of a place to live in
peace and safety. Its what every human being longs for.
There is that beautiful verse in Micah 4:4: “Everyone will
sit under their own vine and under their own fig tree, and no one will make
them afraid, for the LORD Almighty has spoken.”
That is what we all long for.
A place to belong. Enough to eat and drink and rest.
We human beings rarely act like it, but the earth, the land
is a gift. We think we can own it, we think we can use it however we want to,
but we often forget who created it.
The earth is the Lord’s, says the Psalmist, and the fullness
thereof.
When God created the earth, God gave it as a gift. There was—and
still is—enough for everyone. The land is rich with all the things we need. And,
in the end, it belongs to all of us. It is our birthright.
Rebecca and Isaac settled on land and it gave them enough.
The dug wells for water and there was enough to drink. Until, of course, angry
neighbors decided to fill in the wells.
They is a lot of well filling going on in our world. Whole neighborhoods
and communities in Detroit are fighting for water, because, in many poor
communities like theirs, if they can’t pay the water bill, no one has water. In
Flint, the water is nearly undrinkable in some places. Right now, more Native
nations than have ever come together before are on the prairies of North
Dakota, protesting an oil pipeline that they believe will permanently pollute
their water supply. Right now, on our very own Chehalis river, a few hundred
people are begging city council to provide them access to water for drinking
and sanitation.
God created enough. There is enough—there is abundance. But
people are denied access to it.
Here, in this beautiful amazing place that I love so much,
in the middle of fertile farmland, people go hungry. And in the foothills of a
rainforest, people go thirsty. And in the middle of the most beautiful timber
in the world, people have no housing. And their cries are reaching the ear of God,
a God who created all things for all people, a God who stands with the hungry
and the poor and the thirsty.
I was at this river camp late one night this week and in the
gathering dusk, a young man noticed my collar and asked if we could pray. He
brought his friends and a half dozen of us stood and held hands.
His voice echoed through the campsite as he prayed for
himself and his friends, for those he loved who were locked up, as he begged
for protection and for God’s love and for people’s needs to be met. He prayer brought
us to tears. We were on holy ground and holy land, land God created for us all
to share.
And of one thing I was absolutely certain. This young man’s prayers
reached the ears of a God who cares.
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