In the story from John for the second Sunday of Easter Jesus shows his wounds to his fearful disciples. It has always amazed me that educated adults with theological degrees want to take this story with flat-footed literalism instead of common sense. The Gospel of John is masterfully imaginative. I am suggesting here that John heightens the tension between images of living and dying in the manner of a Petrarchan conceit. Petrarch, a poet of the Italian Renaissance, would employ jarring metaphors that brought two seemingly incompatible images together, oxymorons, actually, like peace and war or fire and ice, to create startling and vivid imaginative turns. John Donne, more familiar to English readers, did the same in comparing marriage to a flea or separated lovers to the extended arms of a compass.
Tuesday, 18 March 2008
Easter 2 A
Friday, 14 March 2008
Easter A
The Easter story from the Gospel of John (John 20.1-18) tells of the visit to the tomb in the early hours of the morning. It is still dark, and by the time you have reached this point in your reading of John you know he is not just telling you something about the time of day. Darkness in John is always meaningful, even when it only seems to be descriptive. Insofar as it is the darkness in the prologue that never overcomes the light, as well as the darkness covering the visit of the benighted literalist, Nicodemus or the darkness into which Judas goes when he leaves the Last Supper to do his dirty work, this is the darkness against which we see the light of the dawning resurrection.
In John, the resurrection story collects rebirth moments that have come throughout the gospel and weaves them together in this moment of encounter. Jesus calls his disciples “brothers” here, recalling the prologue (1.12). To all who receive him . . . he gives the power to be children of God, born not of blood or the will of the flesh but of God. This is not just John’s virgin birth story (the story of our virgin birth). It is our resurrection story. When we take the Word as the pattern of our lives, we are reborn into a new life. Our rebirth is linked with the story of Jesus’ ascension, through which we are brothers because we are all children of the same Father: “I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God” (20.17). The ascension of Jesus is the birth of a new community—or a new family.
As the resurrection stories in John (not just the resurrection story, but all the other ones) are embedded in experiences of encounter, the resurrection of Jesus seems to be connected to the experience of transformation in the life of the believer. Mary’s rejoicing that she has “seen” the Lord is built upon when Peter, later, sees the Lord in an encounter that becomes his experience of vocation (in John the calling of the fishermen is placed at the end of the story, not, as in the Synoptics, at the beginning). “Seeing” Jesus in John is a matter of transformed vision and transformed life, a new way of seeing and being that comes through the kind of discipleship that does what Jesus does. In the beginning of the gospels the followers of Jesus are responding to an invitation to “come and see”. The Greeks who would “see” Jesus must learn to die as the grain of wheat must die before it bears much fruit (12.24). They must learn to live as Jesus lives.
Good Friday A
John 18.1-19.42
I think the central motif of John’s Good Friday story is what Tillich would call the “courage to be”, seen in the ability of Jesus to say “I am” at the time of trial and condemnation.
Maundy Thursday A
John 13.1-17, 31b-35, 1 Corinthians 11.23-32
Maundy Thursday, like Palm Sunday, begs dramatic re-enactment by the congregation. One can hardly imagine meeting for worship on this night without celebrating the Lord’s Supper. Here at City United Reformed Church we do so around a large table set with white linen, sharing a pot-luck supper by candle-light. The Sacrament is fully integrated into the meal and yet the gospel set for this service is the gospel of John (13. 1-35), which, glaringly, has no meal.
Thursday, 6 March 2008
Palm Sunday A
The gospel lesson for this Sunday is Matthew 21.1-11. In The Last Week Marcus Borg and Dom Crossan say the Palm Sunday story is a piece of street theatre meant to contrast with a Roman military procession into Jerusalem. They say Pilate would have come into Jerusalem for Passover to keep a lid on things, and he would have come in with a typical display of Roman power. Jesus, in a street theatre reference to Zechariah 9, reminds the crowds of a king who comes into Jerusalem in humility, on a donkey, to banish war and bring peace. While in Mark the reference remains implicit, carried by the structure of the narrative, here in Matthew the reference is explicit. Matthew quotes Zechariah 9.9: “Tell the daughters of Zion, look, you king is coming to you, humble, and mounted on a colt, the foal of a donkey.”
I find the thought that Jesus is challenging what Borg and Crossan call the “domination system” compelling and preachabe. But the Zechariah story properly belongs to the Jewish festival of Sukkoth, in the autumn, not Passover. So I have always wondered if the Palm Sunday story might actually describe something that had happened half a year earlier. Was the timeline collapsed in order to heighten the dramatic tension of what, liturgically, we call “Holy Week”? Surely half a year would have given a more reasonable amount of time for the Galilean Jesus to develop a reputation in Jerusalem and get in trouble with the authorities.
the world, and they that dwell therein.
For he hath founded it upon the seas,
and established it upon the floods.
Who shall ascend into the hill of the LORD?
or who shall stand in his holy place?
He that hath clean hands, and a pure heart;
who hath not lifted up his soul unto vanity, nor sworn deceitfully.
He shall receive the blessing from the LORD,
and righteousness from the God of his salvation.
Interpretation is the key in another sense. Our response to the text is an interpretation. As the reformers said, Scripture doesn’t become the Word of God until it is preached, and even then not until it is lived out in the lives of the faithful (the end point of the interpretive process in praxis).
First of all, simply as a story, Palm Sunday begs “interpretation” in dramatic action. This Sunday is customarily played out in our churches with dramatic processions enacted by the congregation. At University Church in Chicago the whole congregation would make a public procession around the block on Palm Sunday. I remember one hazardous Palm Sunday when the sidewalks were covered with a thin hard sheet of ice. Back inside for worship, the dance choir pranced energetically down the central aisle shaking noisy palm branches which they then laid on the steps at the front of the sanctuary as they bowed in reverence at the conclusion of this entrance rite.
Saturday, 1 March 2008
5 Lent A
The gospel lesson for the 5th Sunday of Lent (John 11.1-45) illustrates every minister’s nightmare of being late for a funeral. I had a funeral myself yesterday as I write this, and all the night before I had tossed and turned with dreams about being late for it. Though the morning was filled with the usual pastoral crises and difficult logistics, through a grim determination practised in many years of ministry I managed to be ready on time. And then my driver failed to show on time, so I was late for the funeral anyway. The nephew of the deceased, reading from John 11 in the service, remarked how fitting it was that the reading should be about Jesus being late for a funeral.
Martha is disconsolate. Have you ever had to deal with grief like this that is at least in part a result of your own incompetence? Jesus mutters some palliative sop about the resurrection to deflect attention away from himself—that seems pretty much what the doctrine was invented to provide—and Martha replies by trotting out the standard theological take on the resurrection she had learned in Sunday school. Blah, blah, blah. It doesn’t help, she says. She doesn’t feel comforted. Her grief is raw.
Thus far the encounter between Jesus and Martha replicates a lot of the pastoral encounters with which we are too painfully familiar. Our incompetence leaves a cloud of unrequited grief in its wake. It happens to the best of us.
But fresh light shines into the scene when Jesus says, “I am the resurrection”. Two things are interesting here, both of them central to the Gospel of John. One is the boldness with which John has Jesus repeat the “I am” phrase he uses elsewhere (I am the bread, I am the light, etc.), betraying the depth to which God, whose name is “I am” (Exodus 3.14) is fully present in Jesus.
The second is what is often called John’s “realised eschatology”—resurrection is not just something for the end of history, as Martha had been taught, or even something that has to wait for after we die. It is a new way of life that Jesus lived, a way of life that embodies God. The Word became flesh in what Jesus did. We can at least say this confessionally, as proclamation, as John does. As Willi Marxsen says in The Resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth, Jesus was resurrected long before he died. The same is true for the ordinary believer who puts flesh on the Word of God through discipleship. Faithful discipleship makes what is hoped for a present reality. This is “realised eschatology” as the discipleship of the people of God. Those who take the wisdom of God (the logos, in Greek) as the shape of their own lives (John 1.12), as Jesus did, become, like him, sons (or daughters) of God, born not of a human father but with God as our father. Or, as Jesus put it to Nicodemus, we are born again. These images coalesce into one vision that interprets the meaning of resurrection in the Gospel of John. Resurrection is a way of life, life that abides in the presence of Christ as Christ abides in us in our discipleship, and so we abide in the presence of God. This is bodily resurrection; it is a matter of the whole person and what the whole person does in history. The gospel that defines eternal life as knowing God and knowing Jesus Christ (John 17.3) affirms that eternal life is realised in life as it is presently lived, the re-born life, the life of the resurrection. Life is not a waiting room. Life is not an ante-chamber to the real action. This is where th language of our funeral services needs to change. Life doesn’t start for us as our friends retreat to the bun fight after the service at the crematorium. William Stringfellow (Instead of Death) said nothing new happens when the undertaker calls that had not already happened on the day of his conversion.
The idea of “resurrection now” as an experienced reality for the born-again disciple interprets the Lazarus story. The Lazarus story never hit me so powerfully as when the gay comedian Peterson Toscano performed at our church here in Cardiff. His show had been built around his own closeted struggle as a conservative evangelical trying to be straight—he’d spent several years in a church-sponsored community dedicated to converting gay men to heterosexuality. During the course of the show, in a parody of preaching on this text from John that began with hilarity but gradually took on increasing gravity, Peterson, with spine-chilling drama, called to Lazarus in the voice of Jesus, “Come out!”. The command was spoken with electric energy, and, for some in the audience, as I learned in conversations in later months, life changing. This was, as H. A. Harrison called it, “true resurrection”. No wonder it is the resurrection of Lazarus that gets Jesus into trouble with the authorities in the Gospel of John. The mandarins of social stability want mechanical conformity and feel threatened by individuation and liberation. This is the conflict in our own world that the Gospel of John wants us to think about. The courage to say “I am” should have primary place in our discipleship and not be isolated in the person of Jesus. Tillich called it the courage to be. This is the kind of life-transformation that is the heart of Christianity. Paul said, if this never happens, then our faith is futile and our preaching is in vain. If it is only for the closeted life of social/political conformity that we live, then we are of all people most to be pitied (John 15.14, 19).
This sense of the Lazarus story opens up when we learn its origins in an early version of the Gospel of Mark. To help understand its place there I’d like to sketch a brief analysis of that gospel’s construction. Mark starts out with the baptism of Jesus, which is linked through various verbal connections to the crucifixion (the splitting open of the heavens and the splitting of the curtain; the declaration of the voice from heaven and the centurion that Jesus is the son of God), giving us something like Paul’s association of baptism with the experience of dying and rising with Christ. In a sense, Mark can be said to be about baptism from start to finish. At mid-point James and John ask Jesus if they can sit at his right and left when he comes into his glory (Mark 10.38-40a). Are they willing to be baptised with the baptism that Jesus himself will undergo? At the end of the day those who are found at the right and left of Jesus in his glory are the two thieves crucified alongside him.
The aspirations of James and John represent the aspirations of the reader, the catechumen for whom this text was written as a way of exploring the nature of the Christian life. The gospel is a manual for those who would be baptised. It tells their story. The figure of a young man is woven through the story who represents such readers. He is the rich young man whom Jesus loved who cannot give up his wealth to follow in the path of discipleship. He is the young man stripped naked the night Jesus is put on trial. Remember that the baptised would have been stripped naked before coming into the water at the time Mark’s gospel was written, and in baptism we are under trial just as Jesus was. The young man at the tomb dressed in white is the baptised, the only witness to the resurrection because he has died and been reborn with Christ.
Helmut Koester in Ancient Christian Gospels shows this story of Lazarus was originally part of this string of references to the “young man” theme in Mark. Clement of Alexandria had a copy of Mark which contained a story that became lost in the version we know. The story comes following Mark 10.34:
There was a certain woman whose brother had died….Jesus stretched out his hand and raised him, grasping his hand. And the young man, looking at Jesus, loved him….they went into the house of the young man, for he was rich.
The Lazarus story in John brings with it this fabric of meaning woven through the Gospel of Mark, a meaning that centres on the experience of conversion, transformation, baptism and resurrection. The Church, with its small-minded, nervous focus on nailing down what actually happened to Jesus on Easter, as in N. T. Wright’s big book, The Resurrection of the Son of God (the title betrays his attempt to distance himself from Marxsen’s book, The Resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth), too often blocks the path of truly discerning this central Christian mystery as something that happens to us. For the orthodox, it’s all something that happened miraculously to Jesus, no thanks to Richard Dawkins. It has very little to do with the life of the disciple, unless the life of the disciple is limited to wonder at the working of big miracles and never grasps the invitation to live as Jesus lived and do what Jesus did, reborn to live, as he did, as God-bearers to the world. It’s a pity that at Easter the pressure of a stiff orthodoxy stands so strong that many preachers feel condemned in their efforts to proclaim this liberating gospel of resurrection that lives at the heart of Christian faith.
