20 Pentecost, Cycle A Proper 25, October 26, 2014
Deuteronomy 34: 1-12 Psalm 90:1-6, 13-17
1 Thessalonians 2:1-8 Matthew 22:34-46
We live under the conditions of a
general and powerful freedom in our world and because of this we can with
Charles Dickens always say, “it is the best of times and it is worst of time.” Our faith life has to do with learning to
adjust to being in the right or wrong place at the right or wrong time in a
right or wrong condition of being. The
conditions of the present create the moment of faith; if things are good in our
pursuit of health, well-being and the pursuit of happiness then we want to
bottle the formula to extend and perpetuate those conditions which seem to be
conducive to our happiness. If the
current life presents us with great obstacles to our health, well-being and
pursuit of happiness, we have to deal with the disappointment, the delayed
gratification, the disgust toward what we think is causing our crisis and in
some cases the fear of sheer cruelty.
The best of times and the worst of times creates the conditions for us
to idealize the past or to wishfully create a rescuing future in order to deal
with or survive the present or simply to preserve what we think works for our
current well-being.
Faith could be all about coping with the freedom of life in the
now. The Holy Scriptures are a record of
the coping power of faith and the creation of stories and narratives to give us
evidence of what was used to inspire salvation as the event of having faith to
cope with the diversity of conditions which freedom brings to us in life.
We might think that those biblical people were those who spun myth to
deal with their pain or their success.
They looked back to the great man Moses and a time when the law and
living was pure and simple and informal and obvious. They idealized their King David to be a
hero, God’s chosen instrument in a Golden Age for God’s people. When Jesus came the times had been so bad for
so many of the Jewish people, they took more comfort in idealizing a better
future with a better hero person. When
one needs a rescue one looks for a hero; one looks for a superhero. You and I can judge how bad we feel about the
problems in our world today by the incredible proliferation of mythical
superheroes of every sort. They are high
tech transformer or old fashioned guys wearing blue, red and yellow spandex
under their street clothes or have a bat cave to go to make a change in their
persona. The biblical people had their
superhero, the messiah. They had the
messianic expectations to help them get through their worst of times.
We today, are just as human as biblical people. We idealize the past; oh if we could get back
to just the basic American Constitution, in all of the Jeffersonian and
Madisonian purity. Now there are so many
laws and regulations; would that it were all simpler. And wasn’t life better when Ike was
president, or Reagan, or Clinton. Each
person from one’s own socio-economic situation idealizes a certain past to help
survive the situation now. Each person
is vulnerable and may take comfort in superheroes to idealize a personal way to a better
future.
We are still mythical thinkers today as much as the biblical people were
in their own time and it does no good to be dismissive about biblical motifs
while we are superiorly blind to our own.
Jesus came to people in the best of times and the worst of times. He came to some who wanted legal purity. If only we could get back to living by all of
the 613 commandments in the Torah, we could have a better life. And isn’t it a shame that so many people don’t
know the 613 commandments and are willing to dismiss living by them. So Jesus, if you are dismissing the 613
commandments, which commandments would you keep as being necessary to your
life?
So here Jesus was like a chief steward on the Titanic which is going
down and his crew is wanting to know if they should set up the shuffleboard
game and on which side of the deck should they put the deck chairs. And Jesus, like a chief steward is thinking, “Guys,
we only need to attend to the life boats right now, because this ship is going
down. It time to think about basic salvation.”
And in the sinking ship of life in the present time salvation is basic:
Love God with all of the heart, soul and mind and love your neighbor as
yourself.
Moses is gone, David is gone and the Romans possess the land. Don’t confuse the people with legal details of
your nostalgia for a different world.
Get to the basics of accessible moral thinking. Give every man, woman and child accessible
criteria for them to judge the actions and thoughts of their lives: Love God and love your neighbor as yourself.
Jesus made ethics and morals accessible to everyone. He gave people the basic judging criteria of
life. We clergy like to add lots of
other rules on top of the basic because our jobs depend on it. We would like for you to think that the
eleventh commandment is: Thou shalt get your pledge card in on time.”
The time of Jesus was like our time; it had enough of the worst of times about it to create the need for a superhero, an imminent savior and rescuer. If we ever needed to be saved it is now. Apocalyptic thinking is “quick fix”
thinking. Life is so bad for the good guys
that God needs to stop all of this right away.
The Flood Story was apocalyptic thinking. The people of the world were so evil and bad
that God had to destroy everyone except Noah and his family and start over. What is true about this is not that such a
story could be verified; what is true is the apocalyptic impulse.
People respond to loss and crises with the apocalyptic impulse as they express the need for
an interventionist superhero in different ways.
In our world we can find ISIL and Boka Haram and Taliban as apocalyptic
violence cults with the simple solution to kill everyone who differs from
them. Hitler, Stalin and Pol Pot and a
host of others have subscribed to apocalyptic violence as a way to usher in the
peace of their controlling realm. The
Caesar was declared the “Savior of the World” who brought about what was called the “Pax
Romana” or the Roman Peace, peace as the result of killing out all opponents to
the type of order that the Caesar imposed.
Jesus is presented as one who had to live within an environment which
included much speculation about a Messianic superhero. People of all sorts had many different
opinion about the superhero. The
superhero motif is our creation to survive now by hoping for the intervention
of a better tomorrow in the form of a personal power that shows us that we are
cared for.
What the record of history shows is that Jesus was not received as the
messiah for those who continued in the synagogue and who excommunicated the
followers of Jesus. What the record of
history shows is that non-Jewish people took over a completely unfamiliar
notion, the notion of the messiah from the Jewish story and adopted it as the
winning motif within the Roman Empire. This
is one of the most baffling ironies of human history.
And I think this elevation of Jesus as a superhero messiah to people who
did not even originate the notion of the messiah happened because Jesus was a
suffering servant messiah. Jesus was a
hidden messiah. Jesus was the one who
was saying, if you want to know the messiah and the impact and the success of
the messiah just, love God and love your neighbor as yourself, and do it one
moment at a time. And suddenly you will
find that messianic takes over one’s life.
Today we are deluged with so many laws and regulations we can let ourselves be
divided by countless requirements and loyalties.
Today, there is incredible public stalemate to accomplish common
good. There is violence abroad in our
world at home and in places far away. And Hollywood catering to our fear has generated hundreds of superheroes to provide us with a catharsis for the
need of a “quick fix” to our world.
But what is the Gospel? The fix
is not quick. The fix is the kind and
quiet and private application of this: Love God with all your heart; love your
neighbor as yourself. If we abide in
this principle we will find the messiah and the messianic within our
lives. Amen.