God Made Us Who We Are: Access Sunday 2024

12Oct

Excerpt from Rev. Mia M. McClain's portion of the sermon given on 10/13/24

Genesis 1:1-2, 26-27a | Translation of The Reverend Wil Gafney, PhD

When beginning he, God, created the heavens and the earth, the earth was shapeless and formless and bleakness covered the face of the deep, while the Spirit of God, she, fluttered over the face of the waters.

26 And God said, “Let us make humankind in our image, according to our likeness; and let them rule the fish of the sea, and the birds of the heavens, and the animals, and the whole earth, and over every creeping creature that creeps upon the earth.”

27 So God created humankind in God’s own image,
    in God’s own image, God created them;


Out of chaos: CREATIVITY!

God begins to create in the midst of chaos, which means that there was something present when God began to create. God was not creating out of nothingness. It might have been formless and shapeless, but in the midst of the formlessness and shapelessness, God says, “Let there be!”

God begins to organize the chaos, and we see

The diversity of God’s creativity!

God says: Let there be light, and let there be land, and there be vegetation,

And then in verse 26, God says this:

“Let us make humankind in our image,”

There is pluralism present in that very statement. There is diversity present in that statement. There is multiplicity present, which means that God is not a God of homogeneity--a creation where every creature looks like, thinks alike, or moves through the world in the same ways.

There is DIVERSITY in God’s CREATIVITY.

“Let us make humankind in our image.”

For Christians, one of our foundational texts asserts that the Word of God became flesh—that is to say that God came down here in bodily form to dwell with us and show us a way. So, “bodily experiences are revelatory to God” (Jane Deland, Images of God Through the Lens of Disability). But whose body?

 Whose body is of revelatory value to God? Whose mind is significant to God?

Is the image of God only able-bodied and with a preferred set of cognitive abilities?

In her master’s thesis paper, Jane Deland suggests that the very idea of being made in the image of God counters a lot of the cultural assumptions prevailing at the time Genesis was compiled. "In ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, pharaohs and kings were the only ones who were thought to be made in the image of gods. Genesis [however] proclaims a revolutionary, democratic concept: every person is regal before God;”

You don’t have to be king or a Pharoah to be regal before God

You don’t have to have position and power to be regal before God

You don’t have to be able to stand up when you preach or be able to speak at all to be regal before God

This telling of the creation story in Genesis 1 opens up a realm of infinite possibilities that suggests that our varying capabilities and identities are beautiful to the all-encompassing God-unit. 

“Let us make humankind in our image.” 

When God says, “make them our image,” God means:

  • Make them like those of us with developmental disabilities
  • Make them like those of us with dyslexia
  • Make them like those of us with restrictive growth
  • Make them like those of us with hearing loss
    • With low vision
    • With loss of taste
    • With autoimmune deficiencies
    • With wheelchairs as companions
    • With mental illness

Make them in OUR image!

And we don’t have to do anything special to maintain our statuses as part of the ever-expanding Imago Dei. Unfortunately, so many of us have felt out of the fold of God’s imaging. We have lived in a world that focuses on our inabilities instead of our capabilities (Dr. Wayne Evans)

It seems like the core of our malfunction throughout the course of time has been connected to a narrow conception of the image of God, and thus, the dishonoring of the images of God that do not look like that of the dominant culture: that is often white, male, able-bodied, with a certain kind of mental capacity, and beyond. What, then, do we say to these things?

  1. As a community of faith, we must endeavor to do continual theological reflection that is liberative for ALL of creation, most notably those living with disability and unique capabilities. And that theological reflection must turn into corrective action!
  2. If we are to move in the direction of full affirmation and inclusivity, we must reject the concept of perfection that has been given to us that posits a certain set of abilities as the norm.
  3. We must proclaim that disability is inherent to God’s creation. It is not something that needs to be prayed away. It is not a punishment. In fact, when God sees us—with their varying abilities—I believe God smiles! God sees God’s reflection in us and God smiles.

No matter what the world says about you, God smiles on you!

No matter how the world tries to limit you to your diagnosis, God smiles on you.

God loves you/me/us.

God’s grace is for you/me/us.

And it’s not contingent on anything but our capacity to receive it.

God made us who we are!

 We are the images of God!

Posted by Mia McClain

On July 10, 2022, The Riverside Baptist Church called Rev. Mia Michelle McClain to be its Senior Pastor. Rev. McClain is the first African American and first woman to serve as Senior Pastor at Riverside Baptist and began her tenure on September 1, 2022. Prior to Riverside, Rev. McClain served as the Associate Minister of Faith Formation and Outreach at the Myers Park Baptist Church in Charlotte, North Carolina, where she is the first African American in the history of Myers Park to be called to serve on its senior staff, and Interim Director of Children’s Ministries at Fort Washington Collegiate Church in New York City.

Rev. McClain was licensed to preach the gospel at First Corinthian Baptist Church (Harlem, New York) and ordained in the New York Conference of the United Church of Christ at Fort Washington Collegiate Church. She is active with the Alliance of Baptists, the United Church of Christ, and The United Church of Canada on special projects on the regional and national levels. She participates in several interfaith and justice initiatives.

Rev. McClain earned her Master of Divinity Degree from Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York. While at Union, she was active in the Black Women’s Caucus and was the recipient of the Jonathan Kneeland Preaching Fellowship and the Karen Ziegler Feminist Preaching Prize.

Prior to her call to ministry, Rev. Mia pursued a career in the performing arts that took her around the US. A proud member of the Actor's Equity Association and the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, Rev. Mia holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Musical Theatre from Syracuse University and a Master of Arts from New York University's Tisch School of the Arts. Her many interests include Worship Arts, Adult Spiritual Formation, Social Media Ministries, Music Composition and Arrangement, and Dance and Choreography. More information about Rev. McClain can be found on her personal website, miamichellemcclain.com

She is the recipient of the Innovation Grant (2021), awarded by the Foundations of Christian Leadership program at Duke Divinity, which enabled research and production around decolonizing liturgical practice and space, and she launched a 4-week course entitled Decolonizing Liturgy. Her liturgical, musical, and literary works have been commissioned and featured by the United Church of Christ, the United Church of Canada, The Alliance of Baptists, the Unitarian Universalists Association, the Feminist Studies in Religion Summer Book Club, and a few books. Most recently, she has served as liturgist and songwriter for the United Church of Christ at General Synod 34, and for the United Church of Canada + United Church of Christ Advent Unwrapped 2022 and 2023 projects.

Above all this, she is a daughter, an aunt, a sister, a niece, a friend, and the proud dog mom of Harrison Claiborne McClain. 

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