My baggage volume varies greatly according to mode of transportation, temperature and likelihood of a social life. If I’m flying to the cottage, I pack pretty light, since I’ll have to carry my luggage and don't need much dress-up attire. Going to a weekend wedding, I’ve been known to carry multiple outfits and more pairs of shoes than there are occasions to wear them – one must have options.
I would have flunked Jesus' Packing 101. As he headed out on another teaching tour, he sent his disciples out too: He called the twelve and began to send them out two by two, and gave them authority over the unclean spirits. He ordered them to take nothing for their journey except a staff; no bread, no bag, no money in their belts; but to wear sandals and not to put on two tunics.
I guess he didn’t mean sandals in seven colors, did he? They were to carry nothing, no luggage, no change of clothes, no money. He insisted they rely completely on the resources they could find in the villages to which they went. They had to live by faith and the Spirit's guidance.
I wonder if we could do this for even one day. Some have to; others have tried it. I know of a bishop who lived homeless in New York City for a month, and there is Barbara Ehrenreich’s experience detailed in her book “Nickel and Dimed,” in which she attempted to live in America on minimum wage jobs. But I don’t think many of us would get very far.
Why would Jesus insist on such stringent conditions for his disciples on their first trip out? To go with nothing, no money, no safety net? Perhaps it’s because he wasn’t sending them with nothing. For one thing, he sent them in twos; nobody went alone. And he sent them with the Spirit’s power, and authority over unclean spirits. They had ammunition against the strongest danger they faced, spiritual temptation and interference from the minions of the Evil One. Physical challenges they could handle, if they could learn to trust.
Absolute faith would be required for those who were to carry forward the mission of God revealed in Christ. Absolute faith is still required. All our safety nets and insurance and savings hold us back from putting “our whole trust in his grace and love,” as Episcopalians promise in baptism. And no, I’m not ready to part with mine yet. I am ready to look at and pray about how they compromise my faith.
St. Francis of Assisi, when he renounced his family’s wealth and severed his relationship with his father, even took off his clothes so as to carry nothing from that life with him. One requirement of those who would join him, at least in the early days when he was still in charge of his own order, was that brothers sell all their possessions and give them to the poor, owning no property at all.
On this Independence Day, contemplating an America in which 64 million people work for less than $15 an hour, while the 400 richest Americans have more wealth than the 204 million who make up the lowest 64 percent of the US population (2017 stats, per the Poor People’s Campaign), we need to ask not only what it means to pack light, but what our independence means if it is shared by so few.
What Christians are to do with wealth is one of the most vexing questions that face us. Giving a lot away makes us feel better about having it – and for those who are content to be on the outer edges of Christ’s life, that is just fine. Jesus did commend generosity. But for those who follow him closely? I suspect our baggage contains much to pray about.
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