Holy Week A,B,C: The Holiest of Weeks

anointing-jesus-feetHOLY MONDAY:  John 12: 1-11

To read the Holy Monday Lectionary Gospel passage, click here

You can imagine these friends around this table filled with wonderful-smelling food, telling stories and laughing together.  And then Mary gets up and picks up this beautiful jar full of expensive perfume.  She pours it lavishly on Jesus’ feet not caring how much she used.  The smell of the perfume fills the room.  And Mary kneels all the way down and wipes Jesus’ feet with her hair as it spills onto the floor.  

This story is one of the few that occurs in all four canonical Gospels.  But it is never told the same way twice, illustrating once again that the Bible was not written as a simple historical narrative but rather a way to connect us to God and to each other.  The Gospel writers place the event at different times and the woman herself is not always even identified.  But the fact that costly perfume is extravagantly poured on Jesus is always the same.  And the fact that those present thought that the use of it was a complete waste is also noted in every account.  Now remember that anointing was not uncommon in this society.  There are many accounts of the anointing of kings at their coronation and priests were anointed when they were ordained.  So it is more and more apparent that those present just don’t get it if they are only worried about how much the act may cost.  Who did they think Jesus was at this point if they did not see him worthy of the same treatment as a king or a priest?  Those who should be “anointing him” as their king, those who should be recognizing him as “The Anointed One”, in Hebrew, “The Messiah”, are the ones that miss it all together.

But this woman, this woman who some of the Gospel writers allow to go unnamed, got it.  She knew who Jesus was and she knew that the hour of his death was fast approaching.  Because the love of Jesus was deeper than this world could handle.  It was a love that the world had never seen.  

In The Gospel According to John, this story comes right after Jesus raised Mary and Martha’s brother, Lazarus, from the dead.  The dinner was perhaps served in gratitude for what Jesus had done for this family.  The ironic thing is that it was this very act of raising Lazarus that has brought Jesus closer to his own death because it is for this that many are looking to arrest and try him.  But most of those at the dinner don’t know that.  They are just enjoying their meal, oblivious to what is down the road. 

Then Mary enters the room and anoints Jesus.  You could probably speculate that the nard had been prepared to anoint her brother, the one who had been dead.  Now you have to understand that women were not supposed to put themselves in a position of being the center of attention.  And they were not supposed to touch a man that was not their husband.  And for a woman to let her hair down in public would have been considered a disgrace.  So as those present saw her, Mary was making a total spectacle of herself.  And then she wastes all this perfume.  Judas surmised that it could be sold for three hundred denairii.  If that were true, that would have been close to one year’s wages for a laborer.  But Albert Schweitzer said that “if you own something you cannot give away, then you don’t own it, it owns you.”

And for Mary, none of that mattered anyway.  The love that she felt for Jesus just made all those things meaningless.  She was truly overcome with love for Christ.  And she wanted him to know that she got it.  And so this act of extravagant generosity, this act of deep, incredible love, the kind of love that Jesus gave, becomes a sort of living embalming, an act that showed Jesus that Mary was with him on his way to the cross— to see, to hear, to smell, to touch, to feel, to laugh, and to love—those are the ways that we connect with one another, those are the ways that we come to life. 

You can’t help but listen to the story of Mary’s anointing without hearing the same thing.  Think about some of the language—Mary took, poured, and wiped.  We will hear those same words this Thursday in the account of Jesus’ last meal:  Jesus took the bread, poured out the wine, and wiped the feet of the disciples, and through these common gestures and such common touch, Jesus shows us what true love is.  And as Mary takes, and pours, and wipes, she shows that same love toward Christ, and this small crowded house in Bethany becomes a cathedral and this simple meal becomes a Eucharist. Through her touch, through her love, the ordinary becomes sacred.  Mary enters Jesus’ life and he becomes part of her.  Her life becomes a sacrament that shows Jesus’ love to the world.  And the whole world is now forever filled with the fragrance of that perfume.

1)      What is your response to this passage?

2)      Where would you find yourself in this story?

3)      What is it that stands in the way of our pouring all that we have out at Jesus’ feet?

 

 

Wheat and crossHOLY TUESDAY:  John 12: 20-36

To read the Holy Tuesday Lectionary Gospel passage, click here

But now is the time for the Son of Man to be glorified. For, as Jesus says, unless a grain of wheat falls to the earth and dies, it remains just single lone grain, worth nothing; but if it dies, it bears fruit and lives on. You see, wheat is known as a caryopsis, meaning that the outer “seed” and the inner fruit are connected. The seed essentially has to die so that the fruit can emerge. If you were to dig around in the ground and uproot a stalk of wheat, you would not find the original seed. It is dead and gone. In essence, the grain must allow itself to be changed.

So what Jesus is trying to tell us here is that if we do everything in our power to protect our lives the way they are—if we successfully thwart change, avoid conflict, prevent pain—then at the end we will find that we have no life at all. He goes on…”Those who love their life lose it, and those who hate their life in this world will keep it for eternal life. Whoever serves me must follow me, and where I am, there will my servant be also. And whoever does this, God will honor.” This is the only time that the Gospel speaks of God honoring someone. And we begin to see the connection unfolding. Whoever follows Jesus through his death, will become part of his everlasting life.  Jesus wanted us to understand not just that he was leaving, not just that his death was imminent, but that this journey to the cross was not just his to make, but ours. Now is the time to walk with Jesus to the cross.

And yet, we still struggle with the whole meaning of the cross. We still struggle over why Jesus had to die at all. Why couldn’t Jesus just figure out a way out of this whole sordid thing and stay around? The world needed to hear more from him. Because then it just would have stayed a seed. But, you see, because Jesus was willing to die, was willing to be changed; God could raise him from the dead and give fruit to the world.  And the cross…whether you believe that God sent Jesus to die, or that human fear and preoccupation with the self put Jesus to death, or whether you think the whole thing was some sort of colossal misunderstanding…the point of the cross is that God took the most horrific, the most violent, the worst that the world and humanity could offer and recreated it into life. And through it, everything—even sin, evil, and suffering is redefined in the image of God. By absorbing himself into the worst of the world and refusing to back away from it, Jesus made sure that it was all put to death with him. By dying unto himself, he created life that will never be defeated. And in the same way, we, too, are baptized into Jesus’ death and then rise to new life.

That is why we walk this journey toward the cross. This is why we spend time there before waking to the Easter lilies. This is the paschal mystery—that true life comes only through journeys through death where we come to understand who God is for us. Christ is died. Christ is risen. Christ will come again. God has given us a new consciousness and a new way of seeing life and in an act of ultimate divine love, the cross became God’s highest act of Creation. It is God’s recreation of everything. “But if it dies, it will bear much fruit.”

1)      What meaning does this passage hold for you?

2)      What does the cross mean for you?

3)      What does it mean to “die to self” and what stands in the way of you doing that on this holiest walk to the Cross?

 

Judas Kissing JesusHOLY WEDNESDAY:  John 13: 21-32

To read the Holy Wednesday Lectionary Gospel passage, click here

This passage is indeed a difficult one.  Look how it begins…”Jesus was troubled in spirit.”  He knew.  He knew that a friend would betray him.  It made him angry and indignant.  But, more than that…it had to hurt.  That has to be one of the worst pains imaginable.  Because…think about it…betrayal is not something that you do to a stranger.  You do not speak of inadvertently cutting someone off in traffic as a “betrayal”.  For, you see, betrayal…true betrayal…is a deep-cutting blade that that can only cut into the closest of relationships.  As painful as it may be, betrayal only happens in the midst of true intimacy.  And that is the most painful of all.

“Very truly, I tell you, one of you will betray me.”  What?  The disciples looked at each other flabbergasted.  NOT one of us.  (And even if it was one of us, it is certainly not I.  Maybe him or him or him.  But I KNOW it’s not me!  I love you!  You are my Lord!)  So Simon Peter leans in…Jesus…come here…come on, you can tell me…who is it?  And Jesus, with perfect parabolic eloquence responds…It is the one to whom I give this piece of bread when I have dipped it in the dish.  And then he hands it to Judas.  Do quickly what you are going to do. 

But the disciples didn’t get it.  Well, of course not…because it really doesn’t make sense.  So they began speculating.  You know what I bet he really MEANT to say?  He MUST have been telling him to buy something for the festival or to give something to the poor.  (After all, just a few days ago, Judas was worried about the poor and why money was not being spent on them rather than on the extravagant anointing of our Lord!)  NOW it makes sense.  Because NONE of us could betray Jesus.  And so the other disciples are removed from the betrayal, relieved of the blame. 

Madeleine L’Engle contends that “if we are brave enough to accept our monsters, to love them, to kiss them, we will find that we are touching not the terrible dragon that we feared, but the loving Lord of all Creation.”  And yet, for centuries, Christians have been deeply bothered by Judas and the account of his betrayal of Jesus.  We have let the other disciples grow up to be heroes and saints but Judas, the quintessential “bad seed,” is relegated to the hell pile.  It was just a kiss.  But it was the kiss of betrayal.  And so, poor Judas is forever the monster of monsters, the dragon of dragons.  But did we ever stop to ask Judas why he did that?  Perhaps he really was bad.  But maybe…just maybe…maybe Judas thought he knew best, thought that he could prove that he was on the “winning side” when Jesus, hero though he was, saved himself from death.  Maybe Judas just got a little overzealous in trying to prove himself right.  We don’t want to consider that because then we might see ourselves in the dragon.

I actually feel sorry for Judas.  I mean, don’t you think the world is a little too quick to jump on him and portray him as the son of darkness.  In fact, Dante places him in the 9th circle of the inferno (along with Brutus and Brutus co-hort, Cassius).  And we are ready to follow along and release the other disciples from any wrongdoing.  (After all…it was apparent, they really didn’t get what was going on anyway!)  But, as I said earlier, this WAS a sign of intimacy.  Judas did love Jesus.  Think about this as a possibility:  Soldiers come to Judas in the dark of night.  This had to be scary.  After all, the tension of the week is mounting.  “Show us Jesus; show us your Lord.”  Judas hesitates.  “Why are you afraid?  Because if Jesus really IS Lord, he can prove it…he can get out of it…just show us.  And here…here’s some money for your trouble.”  You know, thinks Judas, they’re right.  He is Lord.  He can get out of it.  And then, as the writer of Matthew’s Gospel account depicts, when Jesus was condemned to death, Judas could not face himself.  What had he done? How could he live with it?  How could he ever be forgiven?  And so he hanged himself, a victim of his own choices and his own action.

And as for the blameless others, think about Simon Peter, so eager to be a part of Jesus’ “inner circle”…but, three times he was asked…and three times he denied even knowing Jesus.  Is it that much worse to betray a trust then to deny that trust altogether?  We assume not, because we are much more likely to be the culprits of this denial, going our own way, following the ways of the world.  But surely, that can’t be as bad!  So Judas remains the fall guy, the poster child for the worst sin imaginable, and the focus of all the blame for crucifying the Savior of the world.

In her book, Speaking of Sin, Barbara Brown Taylor contends that “sin is our only hope, because the recognition that something is wrong is the first step toward setting it right again.”  What she says is that most of are willing to accept a little of what is wrong in the world as “part of life”.  But that if we decide to call it sin, decide to call it betrayal of the human condition, then we’ve already made a radical shift in our perception of reality.  We’ve already begun the journey toward forgiveness.  The point is that innocence doesn’t really exist at all.  We are not called to stay innocent; we are called to choose God.  They are not the same thing.  But choosing God means looking at ourselves square in the face and looking at our lives for what they really are and what they are really missing.  It means reconciling with God, with others, and even with ourselves.  As Taylor says, “we like to think of forgiveness as a giant eraser on the blackboard of life.”  But that’s not the way it works.  Forgiveness is the starting place, not the place where we end.  It is God’s gift to those who choose to begin again, but where we go with it is up to us.

Madeleine L’Engle tells an old legend that after his death Judas found himself at the bottom of a deep and slimy pit.  For thousands of years he wept his repentance, and when the tears were finally spent he looked up and saw, way, way up, a tiny glimmer of light.  After he had contemplated it for another thousand years or so, he began to try to climb up towards it.  The walls of the pit were dank and slimy, and he kept slipping back down.  Finally, after great effort, he neared the top, and then he slipped and fell all the way back down.  It took him many years to recover, all the time weeping bitter tears of grief and repentance, and then he started to climb again.  After many more falls and efforts and failures he reached the top and dragged himself into an upper room with twelve people seated around a table.  “We’ve been waiting for you, Judas.  We couldn’t begin till you came.” (From “Waiting for Judas”, by Madeleine L’Engle, in Bread and Wine:  Readings for Lent and Easter (Maryknoll, NY:  Orbis Books, 2003), 312.)

That is the crux.  None of us are innocent.  All of us are forgiven.  Holy Thursday does not end in betrayal; it ends in love.  Perhaps rather than trying to lay blame for what happened at the Cross, perhaps rather than using Judas as the scapegoat for all of our own sins, we should let the Cross be what it is—a place of healing, a place of reconciliation, a place of forgiveness, a place of life recreated.  Because of the Cross, all of us are invited to the table. 

1)      What  meaning does this hold for you?

2)      Why are we so bothered by the idea of Judas?

3)      Who do we label “betrayers”?  What meaning does that hold for you?

4)      What does it mean to be innocence?

5)      Is it more important to be innocent or forgiven?

 

HOLY THURSDAY:  John 13: 1-17, 31b-35

"The Last Supper", Leonardo da Vinci, 1494-1498
“The Last Supper”, Leonardo da Vinci, 1494-1498

To read the Maundy Thursday Lectionary Gospel passage, click here

Henri Nouwen makes the claim that Jesus’ two acts of washing the feet of the disciples and offering his body and blood as food and drink belong together.  Nouwen contends that together they make up of the fullness of God’s love.  We’ve heard it before:  Love God with your whole being, offering everything that you are and you’re your neighbor as yourself.  They cannot be separated.  Nouwen says that “Jesus calls us to continue his mission of revealing the perfect love of God in this world.  He calls us to total self-giving. He does not want us to keep anything for ourselves.  Rather, he wants our love to be as full, as radical, and as complete as his own.”

The loving God part is something that, intellectually, we understand.  We’re supposed to love the one who created us.  But what does that mean?  If God loves us, why does God want us to surrender those things that are important to us?  Why does God want us to give up everything that we have, everything that makes us who we are?  The reason…is that God wants us to be who we were created to be.  And part of who were created to be is a creature who gives of oneself radically, completely, just as Christ did.

But this washing feet thing…what is that about?  Feet are personal; feet are intimate; touching someone’s feet is an act of love, isn’t it?  Exactly.  The first time that I participated in a symbolic footwashing on Maundy Thursday, I was reticent.  Would this be uncomfortable?  But kneeling down, taking someone’s feet in my hands, pouring water, and gently caressing them was nothing like I expected.  I felt in those feet where they had been; I felt in those feet the lines of the paths they had walked; I felt in those feet the pain and the joys that they had experienced in their lives.

There is an alternative medicine form called reflexology that has been around for as long as 5,000 years.  It’s claim is that the foot carries patterns of what the rest of the body feels, what the rest of the body experiences.  I don’t really embrace it, although it’s interesting.  I will tell you, though, that it may not be that far off.  Our feet connect us to others.  They touch the earth; they carry us; they lead us into new experiences.  Our feet are the first to feel cold, the first to feel the warmth of the earth, the first to step into a hot bath, the first to brave the chill of cold water.  They are the first off the step in the morning.  And they are the first that carry us to our next point on our journey.  Maybe this is what Jesus knew—that by washing the feet of those whom he served, he was cleansing the world that was connected to them and setting them on their path.

I guess after he finished washing their feet, they finished the meal.  They ate the bread; they drank the wine.  Essentially, Jesus cleansed the world and then gave of himself as sustenance.  We are called to be self-giving, to give all that there is of us to God and to others.  And when we are emptied of all that we think we are, Jesus says, “Take, eat…fill yourself…eat and drink all the sustenance that you need…in remembrance of me.

After this meal, the Scripture says that Jesus took several of the disciples and went down to the Garden of Gethsemane.  They had had a meal together, had communed with each other and now Jesus wanted to show them what it meant to commune with God.  I don’t think he took the disciples because they were ready; he took them because he wanted them to understand; he wanted them to be part of the story.  It was a holy place….a holy space that God had provided them.

The plea from Jesus to “take this cup from me” was not one of trying to get out of what was about to happen; it was a surrender.  Surrendering is what brings us into Communion with God.  Jesus was ready.  He woke the disciples, probably wishing they were a little bit more ready for what was coming.  The hour was at hand.  He would walk through betrayal, desertion, injustice, pain, and death.  But he was in communion with God.  “Were You There?”…

1)      What meaning does this passage hold for you?

2)      What does it mean to be “fully human” to you?

3)      What does that have to do with being “made perfect”?

4)      What cup must pass from you so that you, too, may go to Jerusalem?

Whatever else it was not, it was at least human, this final feast.  One hardly knows whether to laugh or to weep.  They were no better and no worse than they had always been, the twelve feasters.  They were themselves to the end.  And if there is a kind of black comedy about them, the way the Gospels paint the scene, there is a kind of battered courage about them too.  Even though they knew what was coming, knew even what their own unedifying part in it was to be, they stuck to their guns, all but one of them… God makes the saints out of fools and sinners because there is nothing much else to make them out of.  God makes our Messiah out of a fierce and fiercely gentle man who spills himself out, his very flesh and blood, as though it is only a loaf of bread and a cup of sweet red wine that he is spilling…Frail, fallible, foolish as he knows the disciples to be, Jesus feeds them with himself.  The bread is his flesh, the wine his blood, and they are all of them to eat and drink him down.  They are to take his life into themselves and come alive with it, to be his hands and feet in a world where he no longer has hands and feet, to feed his lambs…In eating the bread and drinking the wine, they are to remember him, Jesus tells them, and to remember him not merely in the sense of letting their minds drift back to him in the dim past but in the sense of recalling him to the immediate present…In its fullest sense, remembering is far more than a long backward glance…and  the symbol of bread and wine is far more than symbol…Do this in remembrance of me… (from The Faces of Jesus, by Frederick Buechner, p. 59..62)   

Essentially mysterious but entirely accessible, the sacraments are pure genius for teaching us what we need to know, and paradoxically, what we can never know about our relationship with God. (Barbara Brown Taylor)

 

Sacraments are sign-acts, which include words, actions, and physical elements. They both express and convey the gracious love of God. They make God’s love both visible and effective. We might even say that sacraments are God’s “show and tell,” communicating with us in a way that we, in all our brokenness and limitations, can receive and experience God’s grace. (from This Holy Mystery: A United Methodist Understanding of Holy Communion)

 Eat. Drink. Remember who I am.

Eat. Drink. Remember who I am so you can remember who you are.

Eat. Drink. Remember who I am so you can remember who you are and tell the others.

Eat. Drink. Remember who I am so you can remember who you are and tell the others so that all God’s people can live in communion…in holy communion.

                                    (by Ann Weems, from Kneeling in Jerusalem)

                                                                                      

Crucified ChristGOOD FRIDAY:  (John 18:1-19:42)

To read the Good Friday Lectionary Gospel passage, click here

“And the people stood by…”  We tend to do that.  We stand by, not knowing what to do, not knowing if we should get involved, not wanting to get our hands dirty.  We just wait…wait for Easter morning when the whole ugly thing will be more palatable at which to look.  But Thomas Howard reminds us that “we don’t just have an empty cross with the work finished and done…that which is thus ‘finished’ remains present in actual time…Sin, sorrow, and suffering, and death itself, were indeed taken away at the Cross, but we mortals must enter into the depths of this mystery in actual experience.”  We are called not to merely worship the cross, but to enter its mystery, to be part of its “actual experience.”

This is the most difficult for us Protestant Christians, those of us who have chosen to spend the whole of our church year bowing before the “empty Cross”, the depiction of Christ’s Resurrection and the promise of our own salvation.  And while I’m not willing to trade the large gleaming empty cross at the front of my own sanctuary and permanently replace it with a Crucifix, I think that we do miss part of what the Cross means if we choose to never enter the pain and the suffering that is Christ’s.  In fact, Howard asks, “Where, suddenly, is the theology that teaches that because the Savior did it all, we thereby are reduced to the status of inert bystanders?”  “And the people stood by…”—there it is again—that uncomfortable claim that we stand by and let Christ suffer, that we stand by and wait for Christ to finish up this whole messy ordeal, hand us a lily and a pretty bonnet, and invite us to joyfully sing “Christ the Lord is Risen Today” and go on about our business.

The season of Lent, though, is about entering the experience of the Cross—the whole experience.  Because how can one understand the joy of Resurrection without experiencing the pain and suffering and even the death of Crucifixion?  The two cannot be separated.  There are many people nowadays that describe themselves as “spiritual”, depicting it as something a step above “religious.”  (Personally, I’m not convinced that the two can be effectively separated.)  But there are those who would claim to be “spiritual” and not “religious”.  Being spiritual goes beyond worshipping; it is a way of connecting one’s life with God.  But the Cross is about going further.  We Christians are not called to be merely spiritual; we are called to be incarnational.  We are called to enter and bear all that is Christ—the pain, the suffering, the death, and, just when we think “it is finished”, the joy of rising to eternal life, to an eternity of oneness with God.  If we are to truly understand what that means, we must, then, embrace the entirety of the message of the Cross.  And so, perhaps, if only for awhile (maybe 40 days or so!), we should spend this Season of Lent truly looking at the “pre-Easter” experience of the Cross.  You will be amazed what that Easter morning Cross, gleaming in the sunlight of a newly created day, looks like if you understand how God created it, if you have experienced all that is God. 

 

  1. How comfortable are you with the “unempty” cross?
  2. In what ways do you allow yourself to be a bystander to the Christ experience?
  3. What, for you, does it mean to be incarnational?

 Some Quotes for Further Reflection:

Our faith begins at the point where atheists suppose it must be at an end.  Our faith begins with the bleakness and power which is the night of the cross, abandonment, temptation and doubt about everything that exists!  Our faith must be born where it is abandoned by all tangible reality; it must be born of nothingness, it must taste this nothingness and be given it to taste in a way that no philosophy of nihilism can imagine.  (H. J. Iwand)

The point of Holy Week is to empty.  It is the completion of the process of Lent in which we have made room for our death…Resurrection is finding that place that is just for us.  In the beginning of Holy Week, we find ourselves spiritually homeless.  But when we are homeless, we are ready to be sheltered.  The shelter from death, in life, is on its way.  We don’t need to fear the emptiness. (Donna E. Schaper, in Calmly Plotting the Resurrection, 80)

I am the vessel.  The draught is God’s.  And God is the thirsty one. (Dag Hammarskjold)

Closing

The shadows shift and fly.  The whole long day the air trembles, thick with silence, until, finally, the footsteps are heard, and the noise of the voice of God is upon us.  The Holy One is not afraid to walk on unholy ground.  The Holy Work is done, and the world awaits the dawn of life. (Ann Weems, Kneeling in Jerusalem, (Louisville, KY:  Westminster John Knox Press, 1992.), 80.

God of all Creation, It is you who walks with us to the Cross, you who goes on ahead and waits for us to see the beauty on the other side.  Give us eyes to see where you are calling us to go.  Give us faith to know that there is always an Easter morning after the darkness.  Amen.

(Previously posted 03/24/2013)

Christ the King C: Amen

 

Christ the King, illustration from "The Book of Kells"
Christ the King, illustration from “The Book of Kells”

OLD TESTAMENT:  Jeremiah 23: 1-6

To read the Old Testament Lectionary passage, click here

The “shepherds” here, as opposed to the ones to which we are accustomed to joining us at the stable in a few weeks, are probably Judah’s kings or other high-ranking leaders.  The indictment speaks indirectly to the royal houses of Jehoiakim and Zedekiah, Israel’s last two kings.  Jeremiah says that neither shepherd called the sheep to account, so YHWH is calling them to account.  They are indicted for scattering the sheep in YHWH’s pasture by allowing injustices to exist and causing the people to drift away from their identity as God’s people.  So, the pastoral number will be reduced to a single branch, a “shoot” of the Davidic line, whose reign shall succeed as the reigns of Judah’s present kings have not done.  And under this new Davidic shoot, the future king will reign over a united Judah and Israel (such as existed under King David).  Finally, all will be one.

The prophet’s words sound harsh and full of lament.  The warning comes with an opportunity to learn from the failure of past leadership.  Their responsibility was to lead the people and the nation in their relationship with God.  They have failed.  But there’s another point to this.  The leader cannot lead without the gifts of the people.  The people, too, have failed.  They have not used their gifts; they have not been who God has called them to be.  The underlying implication is that the people had lost their relationship with God.  But, the new Davidic line, the “righteous Shepherd” will bring the people back to the God who wants to be in relationship with them.

The end of the church year has traditionally been a time to be confronted with the judgment of God, not so much to cower in fear, but rather to take stock of ourselves, to seek change, and to seek forgiveness and amendment of life.  We can’t help but ask the question, “Is it I, Lord?” when hearing this text.  No one is totally off the hook. While those with greater responsibility have greater accountability, all of us in democratic governments bear responsibility for the common good. All of us in a church, made up of the priesthood of all believers, bear responsibility for the well-being of all our brothers and sisters in Christ. Even more so than in ancient world, this text becomes for us an equal-opportunity accuser.

But the good news applies to us too. There is a new reign that is coming to be as it sweeps through Creation.  The Kingdom of God has truly come near.  God is now the shepherd and will raise up faithful leaders, a “righteous branch” that will bring the reign to be.  It is a new beginning that will transform the world.

The reading fits well for Christ the King Sunday as we wrap up our Lectionary year.  We have been given everything and yet we are still not what we should be.  But God has not given up on us.  Emmanuel, God with us, is coming soon.

 a.      What is your response to this passage?

 b.      What does this say about leadership, even in our time?

 c.       How does this speak to our own responsibility for bringing in the fullness of the Kingdom of God?

NEW TESTAMENT:  Colossians 1: 11-20

To read the Lectionary Epistle passage, click here

Paul (or probably another teacher writing to the community with the same concerns) speaks to the church in Colossae, a community surrounded by a polytheistic culture that was terrified that if they didn’t appease these spirits that so many knew, they would be subject to disease and poverty and darkness.  So, their Christian teachings had to compete with the values and beliefs (even religious ones) that were swirling around the current culture. So the writer wants to make it abundantly clear that Christ is not just one among many competing approaches to life, not just the first among equals: Christ is at the very center of the meaning of everything, for all people. The question of Jesus Christ is of the most important thing in the lives of his followers.  It is not just something that we think about on Sunday morning, or when someone asks us what church we attend, but a question that shapes our whole life. For the early Christians, and for us today, following Jesus is a big-time “game-changer.” Or, to put it in ancient terms, as Neta Pringle does, the writer of this letter says that being a Christian “is not simply a matter of fitting Jesus into our present way of thinking. We are transferred, moved, deported, from one kingdom to another. Nothing is as we have known it” (Feasting on the Word).

We, too, have “unseen spirits”—the powers of greed and fear, of war and violence, of addiction and commercialism.  We live in a world of exaggerated individualism where we have forgotten about each other and excessive materialism where we have forgotten what is important.  The author of this letter is no harsh teacher but has the heart of a pastor. In response to the fears and confusion of the ancient Colossians, the writer is really kind and compassionate, bringing hope into what was a really scary world.  We are the same.  Christ is truly King over any powers that may come into your life.

In our individual experience, it seems that when a few things fall apart, the whole apparatus of life threatens to collapse. That’s what I see happening whenever people lose their center and forget the comforting quality of the Lord’s presence. It is amazing what a few days of poor test results or unresponsive medication will do. One’s whole world can seem to disintegrate. All coping mechanisms seem to go into hiding.

If I have one prayer for those who are entering critical surgery, it is this: That the peace of Christ will somehow hold the life of this patient and his or her loved ones together. Not physically together, as if no one in the family can afford to die, but spiritually together, as in that incomprehensible peace of Christ that can find its settling way into human hearts.

When chaos strikes, faith-filled people look for ways to quit idolizing their fears. They seek strategies for pulling life back together. The challenge for most of us is to make the priority of Christ more than mere words. Who needs more talk of making Christ first in our lives? The world is full of religious talk. We need instead to act, to live as if Christ were indeed the head of the body, and not some extra equipment we strap on when it’s “third and long.”

In Bibles that provide chapter headings, this section of Colossians may be titled “The Supremacy of Christ,” or something similar. This is the Christ in whom “all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell.” Nothing of God is held back or left out of the person of Jesus. Though God once was content to dwell in places like Sinai, Zion or the Temple, now God is in a person. Everything that God is, and cares about, now resides in Jesus Christ. Christ is the face or the image of the invisible God.

Western culture has so thoroughly domesticated Christ that it takes some imagination to see the cosmic Christ of Colossians. We have whittled him down to the size of a pocket charm, confining him to the containers of our own ethnic, economic and political instincts. Chumminess is in; grandeur is out, We want a version of God that bears some resemblance to ourselves.

Fosteria, Ohio, made news in 1986 when a local resident saw an image of Christ on the rusting side of a soybean oil storage tank. Archer Daniels Midland was suddenly on the religion page. Hundreds of cars lined Route 12 on August evenings, full of curiosity seekers waiting to sneak a peek. As one local named Jimmy noted, “It’s real. The image looks like me, but I’ve always had long hair and a beard.” With more profundity than he may have ever realized, Jimmy spoke for all of us who unwittingly like to see Christ reflecting the image of our own lives.

The way to reorder jumbled lives and hold meaning together in the face of chaos, however, is not to see the fullness of ourselves in Christ. It is to cherish the fullness of God dwelling in Christ. He is the image of the invisible God, the one who holds all things together, the glue that makes Christ the King Sunday so important. (From “Super Glue”, by Peter W. Marty, in “The Christian Century”, November 16, 2004, available at http://www.religion-online.org/showarticle.asp?title=3105, accessed 17 November, 2010)

 a.      What is your response to this passage?

b.      What are the “unseen powers” of our own world and our own lives?

c.       What, in light of this passage, does the Kingdom of God mean to you?

GOSPEL:  Luke 23: 33-43

To read the Lectionary Gospel Passage, click here

Another difficult text…(Did I go to sleep and wake up on Good Friday?) This is the chapter of the story that some of us, rather than hearing the heartbreaking account again, would rather just check out and go get another popcorn and return when the story begins to become more palatable.  We are prepared to hear this story read on Good Friday but, here, this should be a happy Sunday.  After all, we are crowning Christ the King.  And here we read of what can only be characterized as a brutal defeat.  And yet, when you think about it, it’s the climax of Jesus’ ministry.  There on the cross, a rejected and defiled Jesus hangs bleeding and thirsting.  And, yet, the writer of this Gospel depicts Jesus with all of his wits about him.  And praying…praying not for salvation or even a relief in the surely unbearable pain that he was experiencing and definitely not for vengeance to be brought upon those who had inflicted it. At his lowest point, Jesus, rather than decreeing self-pity or anger or vengeance, showered unconditional forgiveness upon the world who had put him there.  All that Jesus had been born to be was in this moment of the most incredible self-giving, self-denying act that anyone could ever do.

And the writer known as Luke tells us that, in effigy, the inscription ordaining Jesus as King is placed over the spot where he hung.  For those who did not get it and for those who don’t today, it is a joke.  On the surface, it makes the story harder to read, as if our team has lost that game.  But at a much deeper level, there is a profound irony to it all.  Because this is truly Jesus’ crowning glory. 

And then we are told of the thief hanging there with him that asked for mercy from this one who in this moment he truly knew was the Christ.  Jesus’ response did not include asking him what he had done with his life.  He did not demand either a confession or a profession.  There was no “if” attached to his answer—no condition of “if you clean up your life” or “if you promise to stop doing what you do or being who you are”.  None of that mattered.  Because in this moment, the man that history has never named anything but “Thief” entered the story that we call the Gospel and was promised eternal life.

You see, it’s not about what we do or who we are.  It’s about becoming the story, becoming the Gospel, the Good News of Jesus Christ.  It’s not about placing a crown on the head of our King but about becoming part of the Coronation, part of that image of Christ the King.  It’s not about proclaiming Christ as King but about being the presence of Christ in this world.  O Come, O Come, Emmanuel, God with Us.  And now we know that’s exactly where God is.  It’s about entering the story.    

In 1741, a well-known German composer living in England received a letter from a friend of his.  The letter contained a compilation of Old Testament and New Testament passages.  The composer was so moved by the words and the story that they held that he locked himself in his study and spent the next 24 days composing the work that we know as “The Messiah”.  When speaking of those 24 days in Late Summer, 1741, one of Handel’s servants was said to have described him with these words:  “He was praying, or he was weeping, or he was staring into eternity.”

If you’ve had an opportunity to hear the whole thing, you know that it begins without words, drawing you into the story, as if reminding you that all of Creation began in silence until God spoke it into being.  And Creation continued through exile and deliverance, through destruction and recreation…and grew and struggled and desperately searched for renewal.  But God remained veiled in awe and mystery with the promise that God will come when God will come and shake things to their very core, ripping apart what we think is good, what we think is just, what we think is right and righteous, and, like a refiner’s fire, transforming everything in Creation’s path.  And, always waiting…waiting on a promise yet to be fulfilled.

We are told that darkness will come but that light is just over the horizon.  And then the announcement comes…the world is with child.  Emmanuel, God with us…no longer hidden, no longer veiled.  And the earth rang out.  And we are invited to follow.  The coming begins our going.  The work begins.  The child grows and shows us not merely what to do to gain a place in heaven, but the very Way to God, the way to usher in the fullness of being for all of Creation.  But it is sometimes hard for us to change.  God has not just come to show us how to live; Christ has come to take away the sin, the brokenness, the darkness of the world.  And then we hear the Gospel for today set to music and for a few bars following we live in requiem.  And then the stone is rolled back and our eternity begins.  We are drawn into sacred space.  Handel depicts it as a door in heaven opening as we are ushered into the throne room of God.  And God is there, veiled in awe and mystery.

And then there is a sound…The angels—angels upon angels, in Handel’s depiction, a “myriad”, as the NRSV puts it sing with full voice.  And all of Creation, even the thief,  is summoned into the story, to sing with highest praise…”Forever and ever and ever”…Amen.

 “Amen” does not mean “the end”.  In Hebrew, it means “indeed, truly”.  Indeed truly, our lives have just begun as the glory of the Lord is revealed and Christ is crowned the King of glory.  You see…it’s more than a story…Handel had it right…it’s a glimpse into eternity.  And in our praying and in our weeping and in our staring right at it, God comes.  O Come, O Come Emmanuel. And with each passing season, we come a little bit closer to seeing that part that is ours to build and tell.  Amen, indeed!

a.      What is your response to this passage?

b.      What does the notion of “Christ the King” mean to you?

c.       What responsibility or part do you play in the coronation?

d.      What things do we let get in the way of the Christ having first place in our lives?

Some Quotes for Further Reflection:

We must remind ourselves that, though our lives are small and our acts seem insignificant, we are generative elements of this universe, and we create meaning with each act that we perform or fail to perform. (Kent Nerburn, Make Me An Instrument of Your Peace)

If the meaning could be put into a sentence, there would be no need of telling the story. (Henry Van Dyke)

 I live my life in widening circles that reach out across the world.  I may not complete this last one but I give myself to it.  (Rainer Maria Rilke)

 Closing

 Waiting for the “when” keeps me from appreciating what I now have.  Longing for promises and dreaming dreams is not a harmful deed as long as the present moment is not overlooked, as long as gratitude rises for what is already here, as long as I do not base my happiness on what is still wanting.  Thankfulness for what has already been given is the foundation for hoping for what is not yet.

Today I am going to put aside my “when this happens” and my “if only this could be” and my “when things get better” and my “as soon as I have this.”  I am going to harvest what I now have, gather all the many gifts that are already mine.  I am going to observe what has been placed in the granary of my heart and marvel at the abundance.

I will stand before this heap of blessings and take a long, grateful look.  I will say farewell to my “when” and be thankful for what is.

 May an abundance of gratitude burst forth as you reflect upon what you have received.

May thanksgiving overflow in your heart, and often be proclaimed in your prayer.

May you gather around the table of your heart the ardent faithfulness, kindness, and

goodness of each person who is true to you.

May the harvest of your good actions bring forth plentiful fruit each day.

May you discover a cache of hidden wisdom among the people and events that have

 brought you distress and sorrow.

May your basket of blessings surprise you with its rich diversity of gifts and its

            opportunities for growth.

May all that nourishes and resources your life bring you daily satisfaction and renewed

 hope.

May you slow your hurried pace of life so that you can be aware of, and enjoy, what you

            too easily take for granted.

May you always be open, willing, and ready to share your blessings with others.

May you never forget the Generous One who loves you lavishly and unconditionally.

 (Joyce Rupp, “When” and “A Thanksgiving Blessing”, from Out of the Ordinary:  Prayers, Poems, and Reflections for Every Season, (Notre Dame, ID:  Ave Maria Press, 1999), 206-207.)

Yes, I’m going to start back with a daily posting during Advent on my other blog.  If you’d like to join me, go to dancingtogod.com and you can follow along!  Grace and Peace, Shelli