Rev. George Miller
Feb 15, 2026
John 9:1-12
Last Sunday we witnessed a visually spectacular
celebration of the Americas, identity, and love for family in the Superbowl Half
Time Show featuring Bad Bunny.
An act of artistic resistance and joy, the
concert began in cane fields, reminding us all of the legacy of slavery. From that image of oppression came the endearing
sight of uncles playing dominos, small business entrepreneurs selling sweet
drinks to a wedding.
For me, the image that stuck out is the child
sleeping on the 3 chairs.
It is an image that anyone who was raised
in a South American family or has been welcomed into their lives knows all too
well.
From Cherokee Street in St. Louis to route
17 in Florida, the image of a child sleeping on chairs while the family gathers
late into the night is iconic.
I remember the first time seeing
this. A Friday night at La Creola Restaurant.
Fully packed place. Rows of tables
pushed together. 2 separate families celebrating birthdays. People in their teens, twenties, forties, eighties. Eating, drinking, laughing, gossiping.
An extremely loud live band followed by an
even louder DJ. So loud that I had to step
outside twice just to calm my ears.
But there were kids there, fully asleep,
zonked out on the chairs. A baby safe
and sound in their abuela’s arms, not stirring.
I grew up in a family in which we were always
left with the babysitter, never taken to adult gatherings like weddings.
But not in Latin families. In a culture where you save grocery bags and
wash and reuse all plastic containers, no one is going to waste money on a
babysitter.
So, in Puerto Rican, Mexican and Peruvian
families, wherever there is a family gathered in celebration, there will be kids
fast asleep, laid out on 2 or 3 chairs put together.
So to “see” this image of the child sleeping
at the Bad Bunny show was an immediate joy- a sense of “I get it! I see it!
I understand it.”
All over the internet people have responded
to this very image. One person said “It
was the most Latin thing I’ve ever seen.”
Others commented “I come from an Italian
family and we do the same thing.” Someone
from the Mid-east said that was also a common sight. So then the dialogue came around to “Maybe we’re
not as different as we think.”
…There is a beauty to see, and to be seen. There is a grace and grounding of new
beginnings when we can see other people for who they are and as they is.
It is perhaps one of the most just,
compassionate and humble things we can do when we welcome space where others
can be seen completely as who they are and what their legacy and traditions be.
To see and to be seen. To witness and watch. To observe and be moved to action.
Today we have yet another water story in
the Gospel of John. Spit used to make
mud; a pool to wash in. Water that leads
to healing. Water that leads to
reconciliation. Water that leads to
sight.
Just as in all the other water stories,
from the wedding to Jacob’s Well, is Jesus, fully present, completely there,
allowing people to have an intimate experience with the Incarnate God, if they
so choose to.
Like last week, where the man had to pick
up his mat and walk, we meet another individual who had to go and wash.
When he does, his ability to see, truly
see, changes. His view is amplified; his
interactions with others change, and he a connection with Jesus in which he
says “I believe.”
To see, and to be seen.
Today we celebrate our many, many
volunteers who do what they do freely, unselfishly, as a ministry to us, the
community, and to God.
Often, the ministry our volunteers do is
unseen, performed in Choir Rooms and Fireside tables, committee meetings,
late-night e-mails, vehicles full of supplies driving to places that care for
the unhoused, abused, hungry.
Today is our chance to say “We see you,
and we thank you.”
Knowing that you don’t volunteer your time
for applause, we applause you.
Your work; your ministries may often go
unnoticed but they allow others to see Christ and to see the Kingdom.
There is another component- for all of us,
the more we are in the presence of Christ, the more we allow God’s amazing
grace to open our eyes, and the more we get to see of the “other.”
The more that God’s amazing grace opens
our eyes, the more we are able to compassionately see and appreciate the other
for who they are, as they are, not through our lens of what is normal or acceptable,
but through their lens of culture, family, faith, history.
In Christ, our eyes are opened. We may not fully understand what another is
saying or agree with what they hold dear, but we can recognize, appreciate,
welcome and want to learn more.
It is a very, very scary time in the
United States for anyone who does not look like me or speak perfect
English.
In Christ, may we find ways to become that
Rock of Refuge, that Limestone of Love that lets everyone know they are seen,
they are loved, and they can fall safely asleep like a child at a Latino wedding
party.
Amen and amen.