Jesus and Dancing
by Kerra from PA
based on 2 Samuel 6:1-5, 12b-19
Today’s liturgy comes from a worship service designed by Ann Weems called “Jesus
and Dancing.” In it the messenger steps out into a single spotlight and announces to
the congregation, “In the book Footnotes and Headlines, Corita Kent quotes Jerome
Murphy as saying: ‘If we left it to the Spirit there would be nothing in the church
but Jesus and dancing.’ That’s right. If we left it to the Spirit, there would
only be the Way and celebrating, The Love and the alleluias. The Living and the joy. The
Gift and the thank you. The Song and the singing. The Good News and the shouting. But do
we believe it? We’re given abundance and we complain. Every day is a birthday and we
walk around lifeless. God gives us Light and we close our eyes. God hands us Christmas and
we yawn. The miracle is that God is always there, not dwelling on our chaos and our
deadness, but offering us change: Life – Joy – Song – Dance. What would it
take to snap you awake? What would it take to make you alive and free to react, to
respond, to live to God’s music?
Once there was a time when you danced. Remember? You weren’t afraid to dance then.
Once you would cry and laugh and dance and sing. Once you could be angry and direct your
anger appropriately. Once you could love fiercely. “Unless you turn and become like
children…” When I think about Jesus and the children, I think about openness,
about open arms – his and theirs. I think about holding and cherishing. I think about
flowers and games in the sun. I think about squealing and giggling and unrestrained
laughter. I think about the spirit with which he received them, accepting, loving, seeing
the aliveness that adults often forfeit for security and prestige. I think of their
spirit, trusting, free, ready, eager. “For such is the kingdom.” Should we
sh-h-h-h the Kingdom of God?”
Ann Weems is one of today’s champions of the gospel. In words both simple and
eloquent, she tells the truth of Holy Scripture – a truth that we long for, and a
truth that scares us to pieces. What does it mean to become a church that is all Jesus and
dancing? What does it mean to become alive in the gospel? What does it mean to cease from
shushing the Kingdom of God? All very important questions that have no easy answers.
My impression of Sunday School’s past is very similar to that of Ann Weems that it
was a place where children were taught manners, politeness, appropriate dress,
memorization of scripture verses, and singing – but were taught very little about the
truth of the gospel. In my younger days, Sunday School was already beginning to wane in
attendance, but I did get the impression that it was about minding my p’s and q’s
(whatever p’s and q’s stand for.) The more my questions dove into the heart of
the gospel, the more reluctant the Sunday School teacher was to answer them, and the more
she would blush at my insistance, the more times I was sent to the pastor or back home to
try to get some real answers.
Doesn’t it seem funny to you that Jesus says that it’s children who really
understand the gospel best, and yet we do our best to hide its complexities from them.
Children are much more tuned in than we give them credit for. Cade has known the tones,
both good and bad, of our voices for a long time, and yet he still can only speak a few
words. His first learned word that initiated a response in him was “shimmy,” his
form of dancing. It’s ironic that his first efforts at communication were ones of
praise.
Portions of the story of David’s rise to power and exertion of that power are
often found in children’s Bibles, but the story as it’s told, has all the
complexities of intensely adult levels of emotional anxiety. For instance, this story
about David’s dancing before the ark tells of David’s yearning to enjoy God, his
struggle to please God, and his fear of displeasing God – all feelings we too tend to
bottle up inside.
David’s first thought given to this honor of parading with the ark of the covenant
is to rejoice, to offer praise, to dance joyfully, wonderfully, and prayerfully at the
head of the celebration. David was selected for royal intentions as a boy, so some of that
boyish eagerness was still very much a part of him. He led the whole house of Israel in
celebrating in a festival atmosphere.
However, the carnival spirit was snuffed out when Uzzah reached out his hand to steady
the ark, and as the text reads, he was struck down dead by God’s hand. For centuries
later, we’ve been trying to figure out what this means. My best guess is that Uzzah
didn’t want the party to get out of hand. He stepped in to control it, to censor the
dancing, to disallow any to and fro swaying of this holiest of the sacred relics. Why this
would kill him, or so kindle God’s anger against him is still a mystery. However, I
think that the message to us is something like – Don’t mess with God’s
party. It may carry some negative consequences.
The interpretation of this act as an act of God’s wrath killed the party spirit in
David too. He became so afraid of what he might do wrong that he sent the ark to someone
else’s house instead of bringing it back into his care in his home city. He only
brought it back when he heard about the great blessings it brought to Obed-edom and his
family. When we let God in, it invites blessings, and the blessings sometimes scare us
more than the predictable regularity of our all too normal days.
There are other tangents to the story about Saul’s daughter railing on David for
his dancing display, and the barrenness it brought to her. There’s David’s own
back and forth with God as to his emotions of joy and fear. But like in so many other
stories of scripture, the message is DANCE, enjoy, this is your life. It’s a gift.
Don’t waste it by being a sour-faced censor. Don’t bash people who are having
fun. Don’t poop on God’s party. It won’t be good for your health. If you’re
not quite sure yet that you can trust in such a lively gospel – one that sounds
suspiciously contemporary and perhaps not very Presbyterian, try to recall the first
question of the Westminster Catechism. It asks the learners of formal Christian doctrine,
“What is the chief end of man?” (Today we might say of humankind.) The
surprising answer is that the chief end for us all is to glorify God, and enjoy God
forever. That doesn’t sound like an answer many Christians would formulate today. In
fact, Christians, modern American Christians, are often stereotyped as hard-nosed,
judgmental, fuddy-duddies.
What are we going to do to change our image? What are we going to do to allow the
Spirit to fill our churches with Jesus and dancing? What are we going to do to welcome the
children (not to make the church grow) but to learn what it means to live into the kingdom
of God?
It is a criticism of our current ways to be sure. The Presbyterian Church continues to
be known more by conflict than joy, more by decline than by laughter, more by its head
than its heart. It makes me sad. My church, the church I love, struggles to be faithful to
the heart of the gospel – and sometimes it seems as though we’re losing that
struggle. But I take hope from David’s story that we haven’t quit dancing, we
haven’t quit yearning for God’s blessing, we’ve just gotten scared that we
might get something wrong so we keep God at arms length at the house of our Gittite
neighbors.
In many other nations, especially in Korea and the African countries, the church is
thriving on Jesus and dancing. In other denominations, there’s a real zeal for the
joy of the gospel – even when the theology can be somewhat shallow. In non-church
goers, there is a revival of spirit and good news that is taking place far apart from
organized religion. It’s a jolt to be sure.
Another way I’ve heard the question raised is that on that final day, when we meet
God one on one, the divine judgment won’t be about what we did or didn’t do, or
what we got right and what we got wrong, God will simply ask us, “So, did you have a
good time?”
Why else would God give us so much? It isn’t for us to be the keepers of the
straight and narrow, that’s for sure. The folks with whom Jesus ministered were about
as diverse as we can think of, and yet he offered the same gifts to all of them, the Way,
the Truth, and the Life.
I could recount a bizillion stories, some scriptural, some inspirational, some
fictional, some that happened to people I know that tell and retell this truth about God’s
desire for us to be dancers, at least spiritual dancers even if we’re awkward on our
feet. Our souls ought to dance with the good news that God loves us and offers us the
world. I’ll close again with the messenger’s final words:
"Is there an alleluia deep inside you growing rusty? Awake and stand in the light.
Praise God’s name with singing and dancing! Unbutton yourselves and stand open to
catch the wind. May they say of us: They are drunk on new wine…. The new wine of the
Spirit. Amen."
Weems, Ann. Reaching for Rainbows: Resources for Creative Worship. The Westminster
Press: Philadelphia, 1980. pp. 91-99. “Jesus and Dancing.