March 21, 2021 "In Suffering Lover" Rev. Dal McCrindle
Speak Lord, in the stillness while we wait on thee. Hushed, our hearts listen in expectancy. Speak O blessed master in this quiet hour. May we see thy face Lord, and feel thy touch of power. An enthusiastic church member said to her pastor: “I’m so wanting to make a trip to the Holy Land and the Sinai, climb to the top of the Mountain and shout out the Ten Commandments.” The pastor replied, “I’ve got a better suggestions; stay home and keep them!”
The Ten Commandments in Israel's experience seemed to make a lot of sense - the Cross, on the other hand, appeared to make much less sense! And yet, it is the way which we tread toward Jerusalem with Jesus. We are another week closer to the remembrance of that Day, and we continue those reflections on the theme of covenant, commandment and cross; a theme which on the surface makes little sense to any rational people.
From the Bible, we’ve learned that Israel spoke of their covenant-relationship with God in somewhat conditional terms. "If you obey the commandments, then God will do or guarantee certain things; the future will go well with you. BUT if you fail to keep those laws and adhere to them, things may not go so well for you! The Ten Commandments were good laws but the terms of Israel's covenant-relationship with God, were understood to be conditional upon their obedience to the Ten Words.
Some of the teachers of the Law, reflected upon Israel's faith, covenant and commandments, in terms of the nation's fidelity. The practice of religion evolved into a kind of spiritual-legalism; elucidating the extent to which one might push the standards before breaking one of GOD'S HOLY LAWS and thus falling under God's terrible judgment.
For example, it is good, even today, to observe the sabbath commandment: not to work all the time, to rest and to give others a break! But what exactly is work? Which activities must be avoided in order to maintain the holiness of a rest day? To one person, "cutting the lawn" is work; to another, it is a restful re-creation. If one is "Not to Kill" how can the nation ward off a hostile and warring army that steals your goods, children, or abuses, tortures and kills your neighbour? To address these ambiguities, a complicated legal system evolved which expanded the basic commandments. So, rules and regulations which governed every detail of living and even dying evolved: rules for killing, rules for eating, rules for working, rules for travelling, rules for entertaining, rules for intimacy and rules for abstinence; and countless rules for prayer, fasting and worship! Phew!
Jeremiah, dreamed of a new age when there would be a new agreement between God and the people. He concluded that breaches in the former covenant, failure to be faithful, had to do, NOT with broken rules or laws, but with an unresponsive heart. Genuine fidelity, he said, springs from within and cannot be a response to an obligatory requirement of legislation. "Create in me, a clean heart O God, and renew a right spirit within Me!"
No longer, will God's leading be tied to an agreement carved on tablets of stone, because God will write a new covenant, and engrave it upon our hearts. Yahweh shall be our God and we shall be God's people: no longer will it be necessary to teach neighbour, sister or brother, for everyone will know God intimately. Idyllic??, possibly, but the vision toward which Jesus still leads us. "?You still seek commandments and laws?” “then, love God and your neighbour!" This kind of thinking did not make sense to the exiled children of Israel during Jeremiah's time, nor to the Greeks and Jews of Jesus' time, nor to most, of our time.
People are asking lots of questions and looking for the right answers. We want precision about what is right and what is wrong; what can be done and what can't be done. We don't like gray areas, opting for a black and white definitions. Maybe, we are so frightened of modern-day living that rather than asking the key-questions, we would rather have things remain the way they've always been, unchanged. It was good enough before, why not now? How far can we go really and still remain within the limits of Christian?
The PLAIN TRUTH Magazine implies by its name that it offers, the straight and trustworthy goods while others are offering something quite different. Those who stand on the streets, peddling their religious literature, go to great efforts to tell, not only how they see it, but how, without a doubt, it really is. There are those, who knock on your door with a brand of religious legalism and narrow orthodoxy which presents a pre-Jeremiah understanding of a loving God. Many in the United Church want precision, clarity and answers..."How should a church and its people respond to capital punishment, abortion, sexual orientation, poverty, power-politics, the economy, international trade, war, sexism, racism, justice?”
We keep saying that the Cross of Jesus is the benchmark for us; that He is the standard against which we judge our thoughts and actions. But what must we do, in order to truly see the incarnation of God's compassion? "Sir," they said, “we wish to see Jesus." How many of us have wished to see but have not perceived nor understood? How many times have we sought to see Jesus, but only got as far as the rules and regulations produced by a new breed of legalists, Plain Truthers and those who grasp at the narrowness of the "thou shalt nots!"
John doesn't tell us whether those who came seeking, ever saw Jesus, nor whether their questions were answered. Those who come and stand under the cross seeking to know Jesus, to find answers to the great questions of faith, seldom get the precision they seek. Often, they do not receive a plain "yes" or "no" to their questions. Instead they ARE offered Christ's very own spirit: so that they can be in love with God, and they can be a neighbour to those once, strangers, and they can hold onto a vision of a cross; a sign of suffering, weakness and failure but a symbol of how we are to live with a covenant which is written on our hearts.
As the farmers gathered round about him, Jesus spoke about grain: "unless wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone. But if it dies..., it bears much fruit." We can imagine the nods of agreement and understanding from the crowd, but then Jesus says, here is the answer for you who seek to know. You, who are now marked on your heart with God's covenant, you too shall go the way I must go: "Whoever loves their life, loses it, and whoever hates their life in this world will keep it for eternal life. Anyone who serves me must follow me; and where I am, there shall my servant be. Anyone who serves me, will be honoured by God."
Our word then, is this: Jesus' way of suffering and serving is indicative of the presence of this new covenant, once dreamt of by Jeremiah. Neither, Jesus nor we treat this prospect of suffering, lightly nor in a simplistic manner. He does pray to be spared this path but says: "Now is my soul troubled! And what shall I say? O God, save me from this hour? No, for this purpose I have come to this hour. O God, glorify your name."
We do not readily, nor eagerly choose self - sacrifice nor is it popular within a success-oriented culture, to suggest that suffering is part of the human predicament. Nor is it easy to understand the complexity and difficulty of being a Samaritan-type neighbour to ALL those in need; ALL! Nor is it comfortable to accept a life of obedience to the gospel, with which God challenges us. It would be terribly misleading to suggest that following Jesus is easy, for it is not! To live under the shadow of the cross, we must have eyes of faith to see and believe and even be prepared to sacrifice and-die-to-self rather than relying upon previously understood reasonable and sensible words which were carved on tablets of stone. Jesus answers our tortured questions about obedience and suffering, not with an explanation or a description limiting the law, but with a demonstration of suffering love. In calling us to follow and serve we are invited to participate in his compassionate life...the life of which Jeremiah so earnestly dreamt. "Write these words on our hearts, we beseech Thee O Lord.” At least that’s the way I see it!