Preached on the Thirteenth Sunday after Pentecost (Proper 18C), September 7, 2025, at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Seattle, Washington by The Rev. Samuel Torvend.
Deuteronomy 30:15-20
Psalm 1
Philemon 1-21
Luke 14:25-33
Woodcut Print by Sister Mary Grace Thul
By the beginning of the second week of the semester, my university students are well aware of the fact that if they commit the cardinal sin of the academy, their names will be written in the book of the damned – that being the cardinal sin of plagiarism – of using someone’s else’s research and writing as if it were their own. For the simple minded, we call it cheating. One student, a young man who flaunted my attendance policy and showed little interest in the course, turned in a midterm essay of such brilliance and superb writing that I asked him to see me. Thinking he would be congratulated for his wonderful work, he smilingly entered my office. He beamed brightly when I told him that I marveled at his essay; that is, until I showed him the copy I had made of the lengthy paragraph he wrote with his own hand on the second week of the term – a paragraph of monumental incoherence, botched grammar, and poor spelling. I then asked him how he had made such amazing improvement in a scant five weeks. Well, to say the least, the jig was up. He was caught and, thankfully, repentant with the promise that there would be no more plagiarism.
Such was not the case in the ancient world of Jesus and Paul. To copy someone else’s work or to use their name as one’s own was a common and legal practice. And so we know now from the labor of biblical scholars that the historical Paul, the Paul who experienced a conversion on the road to Damascus, established Christian communities, and was martyred in Rome, the historical Paul created only seven – seven – letters that were included in the New Testament, the letter to Philemon, our second reading, being one of them. Other authors, writing after the death of Paul, claimed Paul as the author of their letters – letters that either revised or contradicted the writings of the historical Paul. These writers knew of Paul’s fame and thus wanted to capitalize on his fame by using his name even as they endeavored to tone down or reject what was his revolutionary teaching.
For instance, in the historical Paul’s letter to the Galatians, he clearly states that in Christian baptism, the patriarchy of his culture is washed away: women and men are fundamentally equal in Christ, something unheard of in the cultures of the ancient Mediterranean in which a woman was viewed as property or was considered a second class citizen who had to obey her father, husband, and son. But there is more. At the end of his letter to the Romans, the historical Paul spends considerable time praising women as leaders in the Christian movement: praising them as apostles, as preachers and evangelists, as church planters, as hosts for the Christian community and thus as leaders at the Lord’s Supper, the Eucharist. I mean any Roman male, raised into the gender roles of imperial society, would be utterly horrified by this practice and view it as either foolhardy or subversive. As one Roman governor said of women leaders and their Christian congregations, “they are a contagion that needs to be confined and cured before it spreads any further.”
And yet if we read the first letter to Timothy, said to be written by Paul but actually written by an author upset with the historical Paul, we hear these words: “Let a woman learn in silence with full submission. I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man; she is to keep silent” (2:11-12). Well, let’s be clear: an apostle, an evangelist, a preacher, a church planter, and a presider at the Lord’s Table is not going to be silent and submissive. Thus, we discern in this letter to Timothy, written fifty years after Paul’s death, considerable anxiety over Paul’s clear intent to subvert an established cultural bias and practice. But to do this – to question and then disregard what served the desires of elite males – would lead to skepticism, intolerance, why even death. And so we discern in Timothy’s letter a profound anxiety concerning women in positions of leadership. Not so with Paul.
But this was not all. Jesus and Paul lived in the imperial Roman economy: an economy dependent on slave labor. Indeed, every city in the empire had a slave market and by some estimates twenty percent of the population was enslaved. Writing in the late 50s, some twenty years after the death and resurrection of Jesus, Paul asks Philemon to release Onesimus, a fellow Christian and a temporary associate of Paul, from the bonds of slavery. Clearly Onesimus was owned by Philemon, but for the historical Paul, there can be no slavery among Christians for this demeaning and deathly practice was and is washed away in the waters of baptism. “I appeal to you on the basis of love,” writes Paul, to release Onesimus who Paul refers to so tenderly as his “own heart.” NO to slavery, writes Paul, for slavery is the objectification of a human being created in the image of a loving and liberating God.
And yet if we read the letter to the Colossians, a letter thought to be written by Paul but in fact written by another author toward the end of the first century, we hear this: “Slaves, obey your earthly masters in everything” (3:22), a clear rejection of the historical Paul’s insistence on freedom from slavery.
Now we might imagine that the concern of the historical Paul to end slavery at least among Christians is a thing of the past. It’s illegal, is it not? And yet – and yet – the exploitation of human beings is far from ended. Seattle is a major center of human trafficking on the West Coast. Many of the clothes and shoes we wear are produced in overseas sweatshops or by Los Angeles garment workers who are paid less than the minimum wage. And then there is debt bondage: the use of high interest rates to keep one in perpetual servitude to a predatory lender. And this summer, a Midwestern congressman introduced a bill in the House of Representatives to loosen child labor laws. In all seriousness, the promoter of the bill said this: “I want young kids to experience the reward of hard work.”
Dear friends, the historical Paul is the patron of this house, this parish. His searing critique of cultural patriarchy, slavery in many forms, and economic injustice forms his legacy, a legacy of which you and I are the inheritors, a legacy that flows from the waters of the pool that marks the entry to this house. Thus, to dip our fingers in that pool and trace the sign of the cross over our hearts is to renew our commitment to live into that legacy in a time, sadly and tragically, marked by cruelty and corruption at the highest level of government. And yet here, in this place, we may join Paul in his prayer: Refresh our hearts in Christ! Yes, refresh our hearts in Christ, confident that we share in a power greater than any predator, any tyrant. Yes, I say, let us touch that loving, life-giving, and liberating water and let it then flow through us into God’s wounded yet beloved world.