August 16, 2020 Is there Something.....Anything to Hope for?
Is there something, anything to hope for? When things are tough, I mean really tough. When everything that could go wrong, has. Where do we turn? Where do you turn? What do we do? When our chips have run out, the last hand has been played, what do we do then? When you walk down some dark pathway, or the waters rise up over your head and you feel you are going down for the proverbially third time, or come to the dead end, what then? What hope does a Canaanites woman have that a Jewish holy man will listen to her cries?
We’ve been taught from our childhood, conditioned since our youth to trust ourselves. Nobody can help you but yourself. Like the University of BC’s motto “tuum est:” it’s up to you or more favourably “it is yours, the future is yours!” Who’s to lift you up when you are down? When you’re a child you might depend on mom and dad, maybe grandparents. But out there in the big, nasty, unfriendly world, there’s nobody. So lift yourself up by the bootstraps. You are the answer for what ails you. And if you don’t know how to do this, go to the book store, search the racks for just the right “self-help” book.
So what do we do when are truly at the end; no bootstraps to pull up; no energy left; no escape route. Then, says our faith, then we turn to God. Our hope, in life, in death, in life beyond death is in God! Our God is faithful and can be trusted to save us. That’s what Paul is saying to us in his letter to the church at Rome. There’s lots of things you cannot trust in this life, but you can trust in God.
Paul has been writing to the Christians in Rome, celebrating the love of God in Christ Jesus. Mid way through the letter, he admits the pain he feels between the growing separation between the Jews who believe that Jesus is the Messiah and other Jews who do not.
Paul has encountered the risen Christ and seen his own life turned around. He is no longer the man he once was. Yet what about his family and friends, fellow believers who do not look to Jesus and see what Paul sees?
“Has God rejected his own people,” he asks! Centuries before, in covenants with Noah, Abraham and Sarah, God had yoked himself with Israel, had chosen Israel to be a holy nation, a kingdom of priests who would witness around the world on behalf of the one and only true God. “I shall be your God, and you shall be my people. You shall become a light unto the nations! I will never let you go!” Pretty strong stuff!!!
What now? Now that, as Paul sees it, the Messiah has come? What now for the people of Israel who have not recognized Jesus as the Messiah? Does their rejection mean that God will now reject them, that God will now go elsewhere in search of a holy people and they have no hope? Apparently in subsequent generations, the Christian church felt YES and ostracized the Jewish people, whose only fitting treatment was annihilation, or conversion.
But listen to Paul. His answer is short and to the point. “Has God rejected his people? No, by no means!” Later, some followers of Jesus in what had become the Christian Church taught a doctrine of supercessionism, meaning that since the Jewish community had rejected Jesus and the Messiah, God superseded Israel with the Church. The New Jerusalem was not something of God’s making to look forward to, it was God’s establishment of the Christian Church which was the “new Jerusalem!”
But Paul writes that Israel’s rejection of Jesus does not mean that God rejected Israel. In verse 29 he writes, “the gifts and calling of God are irrevocable!” Israel had received the amazing grace and gift of God, the calling of God. God promised “I will be your God and you shall be my people.” These things do not pass away.
This may sound like theological banter but much is at stake here. For if Paul gives in on this one saying, “well, for the last 20 centuries God has been faithful. But now that Israel has been so terribly unfaithful, God has had it with them and all bets are off, all promises are revoked. It’s now over between God and Israel.” If Paul agreed to this then everything he believes about Christ is revoked. No one has any hope.
If God rejects the Jews because the Jews rejected Jesus as Messiah then Paul’s whole gospel is in jeopardy. The good news, that in Jesus Christ, God was reconciling the world to himself, is based on the foundational claim that God is faithful and can be trusted; that God’s gifts and call are irrevocable. Hope abounds!
Paul asserts that God is faithful; keeps promises. Even though we fail to keep up our end of the bargain; God is faithful every day. God’s mercy is not dependent upon our love or faithfulness. God’s mercy is steadfast because that’s the way God is! As Christians, we believe that God will continue to love and keep Israel because in Jesus Christ, the Jew from Nazareth, we have experienced God loving and keeping us.
Everything in this matter depends on God; the stuff between God and Israel, God and us, God and Islam too. Just as God chose Israel to be a holy people, a light to the nations, a witness to all the world, so too in Christ Jesus, God has unexpectedly and graciously chosen we Christians as well. We are grafted onto the tree of Israel, thereby made part of God’s promises to Israel. Now not all Christians act this way as though they believe it, and most certainly many Muslims do not. Although Ishad Manji, a Muslim women quotes in her book “The Trouble With Islam,” “how many of us know the degree to which Islam is a gift of the Jews? If anything, we have reason to be grateful rather than hateful to Jews.” “Being the debut monotheists, the Jews laid the groundwork for the Christians and later the Muslims to emerge. Muslims did not invent one God, they renamed him Allah. That’s Arabic for “the God” – the God of Jews and Christians.”
Therefore our hope as Muslims, as Christians lies in the truth of God’s faithfulness to Israel. And as Paul says, God does not lie. God is faithful and our hope.
In this modern era, I fear that we have whittled God down to an empathetic, but essentially ineffectual little God who might be there or might not. Too often we go to church, we hear much about what we are to do, or how we are to act or what we are to feel. You know, good Christians are the ones who do whatever; even good Muslims are people who do so in so. But that’s not good news, that’s works righteousness. Do this and maybe you’ll be good enough; earn your flight path to heaven. But the good news according to Paul is this, that God acted for us. In Jesus Christ, God has done something that we cannot do for ourselves. Maybe God has done something similar in Mohammed as well. In any case, we have been graced by God. We have been saved even though we have never earned it, can never earn it; no matter what we do.
Israel’s story with God is a story of Israel’s failure to be obedient. Constantly Israel broke their promises with God; went off in all directions, sought after other Gods, did what was base, evil, hurtful to neighbour and family, ignored God whenever it suited. So it is with our own stories. We are not the people we promised to be. We constantly fail to keep our end of the agreement. We say we will be better people when we worship on Sunday but then, Monday!
But not with God. God is faithful. God’s promises are irrevocable. God’s call to us, to you, to me to be a disciple of Jesus continues, despite our failures to live up to our calling. That’s why we ought not go out on a witch hunt when someone doesn’t measure up to our personal standards or expectations. We’re in this together and we’re committed to help and be with one another when we fail, or let one another down, or even hurt one another. That’s our covenant with God and with one another.
In our baptism, we made promises, or our parents made them on our behalf which we later confirmed but God also made promises. I will be your God. I will continue to love you, to prod you, to challenge you, to give you what you need.
God is faithful. Though we often we fail to keep our promises, God never fails to keep the promises God has made to us. We see this visibly in Jesus, who was the embodiment of God’s promise. I will love you, I will walk with you, I will never let you go. I will bring you home. At least that’s the way I see it. Amen