Does God See Us as an Ant Colony? The 8th Sunday after Pentecost 2025

The 8th Sunday after Pentecost 2025

Texts: Ecclesiastes 1:2, 12-14; 2:18-23; Colossians 3:1-11; Luke 12;13-21

The Reverend Marjorie Bevans

Watch the service and listen to the sermon on Youtube.

This morning we have a rare lesson from Ecclesiastes, so it might be helpful to know a little about the book itself before looking at the lesson. The name Ecclesiastes comes from the Hebrew word Qoholoth meaning ‘assembly’. The same word in Greek is ‘ecclesia’, which gives us the name Ecclesiastes. It is not a sermon, but seems to be a teaching for a gathering of Jewish people.

It is a Jewish book, sometimes attributed to King Solomon, and so the book is considered to be one of the works of wisdom in the Hebrew Bible. It most likely dates from around 300 b.c.

The great theme of the book is vanity, and our lesson for this morning is one of the key passages in the whole book. The term ‘vanity of vanities’ is a Hebrew form of a superlative. ‘Vanity of vanities’ therefore means ‘utter vanity.’

Vanity is anything that is light, airy, floating, transitory, feathery, or shifting. Being vain is like chasing a bubble. It’s appearance attracts a child, but it cannot be possessed. When touched, it pops. It is like a mirage in the desert. We cannot put our ultimate trust in vanity, yet many do.

All three lessons this morning suggest putting our trust in God, not the things of creation. In the first lesson everything for which we toil and enjoy cannot be our ultimate goal. To collect things for our sustenance gives a false sense of security, so why worry so much about stuff. We are to rely ultimately on God. This is not to say we are not to be concerned at all about the things which sustain us, because we were also created to be stewards of creation and to use the things of creation. They just cannot become our ultimate concern.

In his letter to the Colossians, Paul declares to that early Christian community, that since they have been raised with Christ, they are no longer to seek the things of the world, but the things that are above where Christ is. The old ways of life—anger, wrath, malice, slander, deception and abusive language must pass away if one is to be truly renewed in Christ. The attraction of earthly things, with which these vices are associated, is not the way of life or the goal of life for a Christian. And this applies to all Christians equally whether slave or free, Greek or Jew, rich or poor. God does not consider station in life, or the superficial—skin color, ethnicity, or the external appearance of anyone, but only what is in the heart and mind of someone. We may fool one another about what is in our hearts and minds, but we do not fool God.

In the Gospel lesson Jesus warns the people about greed of all kinds. The rich man who had the abundant harvest built new barns to keep it so that he could have it and live off it for years. As a kid who grew up on a farm, I’ve always thought the idea was a little ridiculous anyway, because most crops do not keep that long. They will spoil, mice will get into them. But the rich men thought he would have life easy for a few years.

There are different kinds of greed—being overly concerned with getting our needs met—worrying, wanting to have or possess something that is not ours—coveting, when more and more is never enough—hoarding, the competitive desire to have more than we truly need in order to best someone. They used to call it ‘keeping up with the Jones’.

We have heard the call of God at St. Michael’s to help needy people where we can through our outreach ministries. We participate in the distribution of food, we gather the things children need for school, we support a Christian school in Guatemala, and we offer scholarships to students from poor families. We recognize the importance of sustenance and encouraging children to have a brighter future through education.

In my last parish we developed an important outreach ministry to children. We called it The Neighborhood Academy. Children from families living around the church came together on Saturdays to meet adults who had a profession, to interview them and learn from them, so they could dream and plan for their future as adults. The children met firefighters, nurses, police officers, musicians, doctors, chefs, teachers, and EMT’s. They found out what it takes to have a profession—things like getting up in the morning and going to school or work, being honest and reliable, setting goals, working hard, being focused and determined. They learned the satisfaction that can come from accomplishing something. We warned our guest professionals that the children would ask them about money, how much they earned, so they should be prepared to tell the children. Coming from poor families, in which the adults did not work, the children often did want to know about this important detail.

Yet, we welcomed a lot of children whose basic needs were going unmet, so we taught them how to prepare a basic meal for themselves, like how to heat a can of soup, make a grilled cheese sandwich, how to scramble an egg. We gave them food to take home. We helped their families stay in their homes, we clothed them, paid their utilities when needed. Through our rummage sale ministry were able to give families everything they needed for their household.

However, sometimes out of their neediness, some of the children would become a little greedy. They would loudly claim that someone got more than their fair share. They wanted more and more to take home.

Perhaps we had inadvertently created in them the expectation that having enough food and stuff would make them feel safe and secure. We wanted them to have what they needed, but did they know that we did this out of love? How could we teach them about the love God has for them and encourage them to seek the things that are above when their basic needs were so often unmet? How could we build loving relationships with these children when their lives were so chaotic and they moved so often?

Sometimes I think God is looking down on the whole world and what He sees is a bit like an ant colony, people hurrying to and fro, carrying things around urgently, following one another mindlessly, all geared toward the survival of the colony. If you’ve every been stuck in traffic on the beltway around D.C., perhaps you’ve felt you were in an ant colony!

However, ants were not created in the image of God, with a mind, heart and soul meant to seek and love God. When we neglect to pay attention to God, the reason for our existence, we might be more like ants than humans. Our ultimate security is found in God who created our lives and sustains them.

If we live by faith in God, we will be thankful and find it easy to be generous with others. When someone wants to know where is the glory of God to be found in this world, I would suggest it is to be found in the darkest places where followers of Christ are ministering to the sick, the friendless, and the needy, in places among people who see little good or hope. There we were day after day loving God’s children by trying to help them. We love them first, because God loved us first.

Over time and with many challenges we can hope we have learned to trust God. Only God is reliable. What ails humanity most is spiritual poverty, and emptiness that nothing can fill—not wealth, or food, or power, or accomplishment, or even family and friends. All these things are a vanity, they can disappear like a bubble when trying to possess it. When we neglect our personal relationship with God, we are more susceptible to the temptation to seek the things that are beneath God. Our aim is too low. In order to help others see God in their lives, we might need to reconnect to Him ourselves, and find Him to be the source of everything we truly need to be fully human. Amen.

The Rev. Marjorie Bevans

A native of northern Virginia’s horse country, she is a graduate of the University of Virginia (where she majored in philosophy) and the Anglo-Catholic Nashotah House seminary. She also studied law which led to a career in the title insurance business before her call to the ministry in the late 90s. She has been an ordained Episcopal priest for 22 years, serving several parishes in the Richmond area and for the last 12 years as Rector of Good Shepherd Episcopal Church in Parkersburg, West Virginia. (An interesting aside is that she did missionary work among the Inuit in Alaska.) Marjorie is theologically conservative, Christ-centered and very well versed in and focused on scripture. She embraces the traditional liturgy of the Book of Common Prayer. She believes teaching scripture-based theology is her principal calling. She spent the summer of 2022 in England at Oxford studying Christian Apologetics. She is keenly interested in children and young people and feels they have a strong, but unsatisfied, yearning for the life of faith and the spirit. She feels there are several ways to foster a deeper knowledge of God and community, including such things as small home groups and a Theology Pub where young adults can meet to learn about Christ’s teaching in a casual setting. Music is another way to reach out with special services for the young and offerings such as Taizé which is a prayerful form of music. She even uses her love of the outdoors as she did when she started a West Virginia chapter of “Holy Hikes”, a ministry of hiking and celebrating the Eucharist in beautiful places.

Marjorie places high value on pastoral care as well as community participation by her church. At her previous parish, Marjorie led parish involvement in a variety of important community support activities; for example, collaborating with town officials in establishing a Neighborhood Youth Academy, a community garden, and allowing Narcotics Anonymous to meet at the church.

One of Marjorie’s principal interests outside of her priestly duties is all forms of church and classical music. She has a trained choral voice and she told us that it was the Anglican musical tradition that drew her to the Episcopal Church in the first place. Her favorite pastimes are horseback riding and enjoying the outdoors. In fact, as a young priest, she served as chaplain to the owners, jockeys, and trainers at the local racetrack. Now she likes to hike and works out several days a week. Her husband, Bruce, is also an Episcopal priest. He serves two small congregations in West Virginia.