
A sermon preached on September 30, 2018 at the First Baptist Church of Christ, Macon, Georgia
Let the words of my mouth and the meditations of our hearts be acceptable in your sight, O Lord, our hope and our refuge. Amen.
I
In July, I received a note from Ellen. She is 22-years-old, a college graduate with honors, a strong, confident young woman. This is what she wrote:
âI love all of you so much. None of this would be possible without you. My time with you had such an enormous impact on who I am, and I can’t thank you enough for everything you’ve done to get me to this point. You’re my family forever and always.  Ellen.â    (Written on her wedding day, July 8, 2018)
Thirteen-year-old Ellen came to us at Safe Places, an organization where my staff and I cared for women who had been abused, children exposed to violence, and young girls who had escaped the evil grip of human trafficking. When we first met Ellen, she was silent, lifeless, angry â hurt deeply in her soul. But after a few months, Ellenâs vivacious personality began to emerge. Slowly, she opened up her hurt place and let healing in.Â
Ellen was eventually strong enough to be a part of our Princess Program, where girls who had experienced violence spent the summer learning and sharing, and discovering their inner courage, resilience, and sacred worth. After the summer, we celebrated the girls at the Arkansas Governorâs Mansion with a grand ball, a very grand ball.Â
When they put on their sparkling gowns, and the most glittering shoes I had ever seen, they believed â for at least one magical night â that truly they were princesses. Our wise staff taught them that even princesses can be violated, but they already knew that. They had lived through the humiliation of verbal abuse, the pain of physical and sexual abuse, and the long-lasting effects of emotional abuse. For many of them, it happened in the one place that should have been safe â in their homes.
II
Throughout history, we encounter stories of violence. Such is our story today, a story about how violence devastates Princess Tamar, King Davidâs daughter. Sometimes historians, biblical expositors and even story-telling preachers come upon stories that are hard to tell. This is one of those stories. Itâs probably not included in any anthology of âThe Worldâs Most Inspiring Bible Stories.â Itâs a story we donât tell to our children. We might prefer to skip this story altogether. Theologian, Phyllis Trible, would call it a text of terror. And yet, it is the word of the Lord, and, as such, it offers some truths, some warnings, some questions, and maybe even a smidgen of grace.
So even though we find trouble in this text, God might just whisper, and gently nudge us to listen and to let the story reveal some important ways God calls us to do justice.Â
Listen for the whisper of God in the reading of sacred scripture, 2 Samuel 13: 1-22.
In the course of time, Amnon son of David fell in love with Tamar, the beautiful sister of Absalom son of David. Amnon became so obsessed with his sister Tamar that he made himself ill. She was a virgin, and it seemed impossible for him to do anything to her.
Now Amnon had an adviser named Jonadab son of Shimeah, Davidâs brother. Jonadab was a very shrewd man. He asked Amnon, âWhy do you, the kingâs son, look so haggard morning after morning? Wonât you tell me?â
Amnon said to him, âIâm in love with Tamar, my brother Absalomâs sister.â
âGo to bed and pretend to be ill,â Jonadab said. âWhen your father comes to see you, say to him, âI would like my sister Tamar to come and give me something to eat. Let her prepare the food in my sight so I may watch her and then eat it from her hand.ââ
So Amnon lay down and pretended to be ill. When the king came to see him, Amnon said to him, âI would like my sister Tamar to come and make some special bread in my sight, so I may eat from her hand.â
David sent word to Tamar at the palace: âGo to the house of your brother Amnon and prepare some food for him.â So Tamar went to the house of her brother Amnon, who was lying down. She took some dough, kneaded it, made the bread in his sight and baked it. Then she took the pan and served him the bread, but he refused to eat.
âSend everyone out of here,â Amnon said. So everyone left him. Then Amnon said to Tamar, âBring the food here into my bedroom so I may eat from your hand.â And Tamar took the bread she had prepared and brought it to her brother Amnon in his bedroom. But when she took it to him to eat, he grabbed her and said, âCome to bed with me, my sister.â
âNo, my brother!â she said to him. âDonât force me! Such a thing should not be done in Israel! Donât do this wicked thing. What about me? Where could I get rid of my disgrace? And what about you? You would be like one of the wicked fools in Israel. Please speak to the king; he will not keep me from being married to you.â But he refused to listen to her, and since he was stronger than she, he raped her.
Then Amnon hated her with intense hatred. In fact, he hated her more than he had loved her. Amnon said to her, âGet up and get out!â
âNo!â she said to him. âSending me away would be a greater wrong than what you have already done to me.â
But he refused to listen to her. He called his personal servant and said, âGet this woman out of my sight and bolt the door after her.â So his servant put her out and bolted the door after her. She was wearing an ornate robe, for this was the kind of garment the virgin daughters of the king wore. Tamar put ashes on her head and tore the ornate robe she was wearing. She put her hands on her head and went away, weeping aloud as she went.
Her brother Absalom said to her, âHas that Amnon, your brother, been with you? Be quiet for now, my sister; he is your brother. Donât take this thing to heart.â And Tamar lived in her brother Absalomâs house, a desolate woman.
When King David heard all this, he was furious. And Absalom never said a word to Amnon, either good or bad; he hated Amnon because he had disgraced his sister Tamar.
III
Indeed, there is trouble in this disturbing text. We discover it when we eavesdrop on Princess Tamar â daughter of King David, sister of Absolom, and half sister of Amnon. We learn that Amnon conspired to be alone with her. His sly servant came up with a plan, and she ended up in Amnonâs room. After hurting her, he rejected her harshly. He called for his servant: âGet rid of this woman! Banish her from my presence! Bolt the door after her!âÂ
He would not even use her name.
Tamar collapsed outside the door, plunged her hand into the cooling ashes of the fire, and rubbed the ashes into her hair. As she staggered away, she tore her richly embroidered gown as a sign of her deep-down despair. Even princesses can be violated!
King David was angry, but did nothing either to punish his beloved son or to comfort his despairing daughter. There was no consolation from father to daughter, not a single trace of compassion. And her mother is silent.
Near the end of the story, we stumble upon a tiny touch of grace when we learn that brother Absolom takes Tamar into his home. But she is no longer a princess of royal lineage. She fades into oblivion and lives out her days as a refugee in her brotherâs house, a desolate woman who will never marry and bear children. But did Tamar fade into oblivion?Â
I donât think so! Tamarâs voice was not silenced. She told someone her story, and that someone heard her, and remembered her story, and re-told her story, and told it at the right time to the right person so that this story made its way into our holy scripture. Thousands of years later, we do know Tamarâs name. Across all barriers of history and culture, and if we imagine, we can hear her speak across the ages: Â
âI lost my life that day. Here in my brother Absolomâs house, I am a prisoner. I will never have children that will bear my name through the generations. I will not know that deepest of joys.â
IV
So just keep silence, King David! Stay silent, mother of Tamar! Protect your violent son at all costs.Â
What a deadly picture of family violence â the violence of a brother overpowering his sister, and emotional violence because both parents remained silent.
We might ask: where were the voices of her parents? We cannot help but wonder how Tamarâs father and mother might have responded differently. But this royal family decided to keep silence to protect Amnon.
In her sermon, âThe Silences We Keep,â Rev. MarQuita Carmichael Burton speaks of âconspiratorial silence.â Reflecting on Tamarâs story, Rev. Burton speaks these words:
Reclaim our voices, shatter the façade of the deadly silence we keep. . .
We must trade in our torn robes and ashes for a bull horn and a listening ear and tell the truth of our story, so that our souls, minds, bodies and the people we say we love might be healed.Â
As former silenced victims choose to no longer acquiesce to the demands of the clan elders and refuse the false healing promised by our conspiratorial muteness, we move forward to reclaim freedom and wholeness on our terms, because we need it and so does the village.
V
In the end, itâs all about justice, and the Prophet Isaiah knew a lot about that.
Break every yoke! Then your light shall rise in the darkness!Â
You shall be called the repairers of the breach!
We have seen a breach, and from the abyss of that breach, the âMe Tooâ movement erupted. The movement is a wonder to behold, and perhaps the cry of âMe Tooâ is precisely where we find the movement of God. Secrets held for decades came out of the darkness into the light, and grief-filled silences found words. Tears flowed freely from hearts that held on far too long to painful stories.
But I wish that no person had ever needed to cry out âMeToo.â That no one had ever endured the horrifying violence that caused them to live with a silence and secrecy that held such power over their lives.Â
I wish they had never felt the grief that tormented them in the voiceless spaces of their spirits.Â
I wish that Tamar had always been a princess â loved, cherished, protected by her parents.Â
But she was not. And so many of our sisters and brothers and neighbors and friends are not.Â
We may not always know who they are, but perhaps it is most important for them to know who we are, a people committed to justice.
VI
Dear people of First Baptist Church of Christ, I marvel at the many and mighty ways you do justice â creating beloved community across racial and cultural and ethnic divides, feeding the hungry, caring for the poor, seeing the sacred worth of every person.Â
Can we also find ways to do justice within families? One in four of us in this sanctuary have experienced â or are currently experiencing â family violence.Â
Among all the things that doing justice is, it is also being healers of the wounds that happen in the prisons of family secrecy. What does that mean exactly?Â
I believe it means finding healing and gentle ways to give voice to a familyâs secrets and silences.Â
It means being ever a kind listener and never a judgmental voice.Â
It means making sure that church is a safe and sacred space.Â
It means keeping a watchful eye, always, over children, teaching them to be safe, not only from strangers, but from people they know and trust.Â
It means being aware of the invisible wounds that others carry, and reaching out with tenderness that brings healing.Â
If Jesus were among us today, I imagine him speaking justice to the unconscionable abuse of power that causes violence. He would call out husbands who abuse their wives, brothers who hurt their sisters, parents who harm their children. Jesus might look into homes and cry out, âWoe to you!âÂ
And then, in his gentle, loving way, Jesus would reach out to the those who suffer violence, take their hands, and speak hope to despair.Â
Jesus is not physically among us. but he left us in charge. So when we fail to seek justice in every place where abuse happens, we confine him. Joseph B. Clower, Jr. expresses this most eloquently in the final lines of his book, The Church in the Thought of Jesus:
If the indwelling Christ is not confined, then the Churchâs eyes flow with his tears, her heart is moved with his compassion, her hands are coarsened with his labor, her feet are wearied with his walking among men [people].
 When we accept this weighty call and this daunting responsibility, the prophet Isaiah might call us repairers of the breach!
VII
So letâs end our story . . . Yes, Princess Tamar lost her royal status. But the final word in this story belongs to the brother who loved and esteemed her, and who honored her. In the chapter following our text, we learn that Absalom was the father of three sons and a beautiful daughter he named Tamar, in honor of his sister. Â
Can you imagine Tamar taking her infant niece into longing arms that never expected to cradle a child who would carry her name?Â
Can you imagine her full heart as she envisions the future of Princess Tamar the Second, daughter of Absalom, granddaughter of King David, niece of Princess Tamar the First?
What a surprise from God â anointing Tamarâs wounds with a holy, healing balm!Â
And this is the very foundation of our Christian hope: the faith, the conviction, the assurance, the certainty that when Tamar was crying, God was listening.Â
People of God, we must repair the breach and seize this holy task: covering survivors of family violence with the compassionate cloak of justice, confronting violence wherever it casts its shadow, following God into every place where justice must overcome oppression.
On the campus of Philander Smith College in Little Rock, Arkansas, there is a building that faces the interstate. On that building is a huge sign declaring a strong, prophetic message to over 100,000 motorists traveling past it every day. The sign reads âThink Justice!â But it means so much more!Â
It means longing for justice, praying for justice, insisting upon justice â persisting, prevailing, creating â doing justice, breathing justice â in families, in communities, and to the ends of the earth.Â
Then the mighty waters of justice will roll over us, and we will wade together in ever-flowing streams of righteousness. Amen.