Genesis 45:3-11, 15 Psalm 37:1-12, 41-42
1 Corinthians 15:35-38,42-50 Luke 6:27-38
1 Corinthians 15:35-38,42-50 Luke 6:27-38
Holy Scriptures are multivocal in that they represent the voices of many writers over many years who opened themselves up to insights about how God was involved in their times and places and they offered recommendations, pieties, and behaviors about how the people of their time could find meaningful relevance of God in their lives. This mode of being has continued for many years and still motivates us today.
The lectionary each Sunday represents the various voices of the multivocality of Scriptures by assigning a reading from the Hebrew Scriptures with a Psalm or Canticle, plus a non-Gospel New Testament reading, and lastly a Gospel reading based upon the conviction that the witnesses about Jesus present us with the core identity of our community life. And even if we agree that Jesus is the core of our identity, various Christians emphasize different facets of even the witnesses that we have about Jesus. Our traditions ends up be multivocality about God and multivocality about the multivocalities about God. And if this seems oft confusing, the genius of this is acknowledging the uniqueness of each person's interpretative experience from one's own experiential background and environments. And if the love of God is the big answer to everything, fittingly, the challenge is in the details of making love actual in context specific ways.
Probably one of the most heroic love ethics is found in the famous beatitude words of Jesus, which come to us in slightly different words on a mountain and on a plain in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke, respectively. We've read the appointed portion of the beatitudes from Luke's Gospel today.
What are the words? What are conditions which such words reveal? And why do I call it a heroic love ethic?
Jesus said, "I say to you that listen, Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who abuse you. If anyone strikes you on the cheek, offer the other also; and from anyone who takes away your coat do not withhold even your shirt. Give to everyone who begs from you; and if anyone takes away your goods, do not ask for them again. Do to others as you would have them do to you.
From the text of the portions of the beatitude according to Luke's Gospel, what assumptions can we make about the recipients of the writings in their lives and world?
From the text of the portions of the beatitude according to Luke's Gospel, what assumptions can we make about the recipients of the writings in their lives and world?
It seems as though the word imply that people had enemies. People were hated. People were cursed. People were abused. People were having bullying acts of violence inflicted upon them. People were stealing the clothes off their backs. People were so needy that they had to beg.
To the people who experienced these deprivations, they were asked to follow the golden rule. You do not want enemies, you do not want to be hated, you do not want to be cursed, you do not want to be abused, you do not want to have things stolen or taken from you, so imagine the very best treatment that someone can provide you and that is how you are to treat others.
When times are normal, most people are just live and let live sort of people. Normal everyday living does not usually require the conditions of having enemies, hatred, cursing, abuse, open violence, or open stealing, and perpetual begging.
The literal significance of the beatitudes only make sense in the crisis times of a people being oppressed. The oppression is so open and common to a group of people that they have strategic decisions to make. Do we as powerless people try to live the law of justice, an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth? If powerless people try to respond in kind; they lose all their freedom or even their lives. To survive, oppressed people adopt a winsome lifestyle. "We have to be on our best performance for our oppressors so they will treat us better and so they do not get violent and harm us to death. We need a survival ethic."
Champions of oppressed people like Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. were proponents of the non-violent lifestyle of the beatitudes. Be so good, heroically good in the face of one's oppressor such that the contrast of goodness and their own cruelty is so great that it might bring them to shame.
We need to be very honest. The life conditions which requires the lifestyle of the beatitudes is not a situation where justice prevails. One can honestly say that people who oppress are enemies to the people whom they oppress. One has to be heroic to love the abusive enemy, but not the abusive mistreatment.
The saddest thing about the Beatitudes is that it acknowledges the conditions of oppression as what the true conditions of life that some people are forced to live.
We can sigh with relief when we have comfortable situations which do not require the heroic love ethics of the beatitudes. At the same time, we should live heroically to prevent the situations of oppression from ever coming to be.
History has given us horrendous examples of oppression. Many nations and conquerors have invaded and enslaved; some have become benign rulers as long as the populations accept the conditions of being ruled. The conditions which brought about slavery, the holocaust, apartheid, ethnic cleansing and mis-treatment of marginalized persons in society have and still plague our world. We ourselves are not blameless in being knowing or unknowing accomplices to behaviors which are not worthy of being associated with Jesus Christ. Oppressor force the oppressed to be compliantly good for their survival.
We affirm the heroic love ethic of the beatitudes even as we try to build societies which do not need such heroic love. We do need in our rather petty and selfish ways within our various communities to practice the practical golden rule love in regarding the dignity of each other and in our inevitable failures we need to make forgiveness the an important tough love act of our communal practice.
In the oral traditions of the people of Israel, a profound act of forgiveness is cited as the act which saved their ancient heir Jacob and his family when a severe drought in their land sent the sons of Jacob to a foreign land for food supplies. The proud dreamer Joseph, who was presumed dead, but sold as a slave to Egypt had risen to prominence in Egypt. And when his unknowing brothers came to Egypt for supplies, he revealed himself to them and forgave them for his separation from his father, his home, and them. And this act of forgiveness made providential the suffering of his life of separation from his homeland.
The Psalmist reminds us in the songs for worship that time means waiting for good things to happen so as to give providential context to contrast the less than good things which comes to anyone. We are reminded that there is something about love which can bring us to eventually confess providence.
The writings of the New Testament happened in times when the heroic love ethic of the beatitudes was required of oppressed people who often lacked advocates within the Roman Empire. Part of the reason of the love ethic of the beatitudes is based upon the fact that both Jesus and Paul were apocalyptic preachers. We have to love heroically now because this age, this life, and our bodies are passing away, and it is going to happen very soon. To preach hope, Paul wrote that we would have a new spiritual body which would be imperishable. We will leave our bodies which are subject of oppressive conditions to the dust of the earth. But while we are still alive we are to live heroically loving lives as a witness that our inner lives have partaken of new creation of resurrection spirituality.
Whether we need an apocalyptic narrative about the end of life as we know it, or just hope in our preparation for good deaths, we need love, which sometimes requires the heroic, sometimes near the impossible grace of forgiveness, but mostly just practical and commonsensical regarding the dignity of each other as we live in our multivocal communities, because we're all different.
May God give us heroic love, if we need it. May God give us practical golden rule love, because it is the art of living well. May God give us forgiveness when we need to receive it and when we need to offer it. And may God give us continuing visions of always having a future, in life, after life, after life, after life......Amen