March 28, 2021 "God Along the Way " Rev. Dal McCrindle PALM SUNDAY
Today, Palm/Passion Sunday, begins the Holiest week of the Christian Year. Nadia just read of the triumphal entry of Jesus when the crowds shouted “hosannas” and some years we narrate the whole story of his arrest, trial and crucifixion. On Friday at the Presbyterian Church we will listen in on a great tragedy; for the innocent man who suffers horribly is none other than the Son of God, the one who came to save us all! The hosannas quickly become shouts of crucify! And what began as a triumphal entry parade of success ends with the Lamb of God hanging on a cross, crucified as a common criminal, left alone while his faithless followers hide in the shadows, with their hopes and dreams dashed! As the African/American Spiritual goes “and he never said a mumblin’ word, not a word, not a word. He doesn’t look much like the Son of God or the Saviour of the world; just hanging there, suffering.
Suffering has always been hard for Christians, Like, why did this have to happen to Jesus? Beginnings are more fun to face and cope with than endings. Christmas is so much easier to commemorate: baby, presents, love, hope and joy. Palm/Passion Sunday and Holy Week focuses on failure, suffering and death. Why does it have to happen this way? Couldn’t God have intervened and changed things? Why does there have to be so much suffering? Why does suffering have to happen to me?
We know the answer before we finish the question. We are human, humus, of the earth, mortal We have an allotted amount of time, but in our pain, we still ask the questions: why? Maybe we can accept the reality of our journey’s termination; but why doesn’t God do something along the way, anything? Ever since the dawning of human life, people have been asking that question and filling in the blanks as best they could. Maybe they deserved it, riotous living and all that! But why do bad things happen to good people?
When the pain and suffering doesn’t abate our questioning moves away from questioning about suffering to questions about God. It’s said that “God won’t heap on us anything more than we can cope with” or “there is something to be learned from every experience.” But when bad things happen, we pray, but still the suffering goes on. The tragedies of life fly in the face of the power of prayer to change their realities. Every day, twice a day, her mother prayed for her, that she would get better, but she did not and died at 16. The person who has been hit with illness after illness, a cure seems immanent and yet another tragedy strikes them. A young man doing his job is hit and dragged by a car driven by a petty thief for 7 kilometres, before stopping. What can be learned for the betterment of them, or us? If God is so good, why, why no action.
Long ago a philosopher said, “either God is good, but ineffective and unconcerned in which case he is not good for us, or considering the unrelieved, unjustified pain in the world, God is evil.” Rabbi Kushner, the author of Why Bad Things Happen to Good People, pens that God has only 6 days for creation: things were left incomplete and stuff happens. God isn’t our personal errand boy who can be called upon to fix the messes we find ourselves in, no matter how awful they be.
The Hebrews, too struggled with this concept of a rescuing God; when they were good, they could expect reward and when they were bad, punishment would ensue. But then came the book of Job which challenged that view. A good, decent and God-fearing man suffers. Surely God isn’t roaming around night and day seeking the perishing to rescue, the lost to find and bring home, the suffering to assuage; and yet, that’s what we pray for, sing about.
Rescue the perishing, care for the dying
Snatch them in pity from sin and the grave.
Weep o’er the erring one, lift up the fallen one,
Tell them of Jesus the mighty to save.
Rendering God this way is easier for people to accept, ’cause it lets God off the hook. God created and then, left everyone and everything to fend for itself. God doesn’t meddle with the natural laws that God set up in the first place. This kind of religion rescues us from having to make excuses for God’s lack of engagement with us and our suffering. God doesn’t heal, save, rescue or reach in, not because God is unconcerned which God being love is, but rather because God is uninvolved.
We are free to run the world as we see fit and suffer the consequences as well. The blood bath of the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st are a testimony of our failure to care for creation and one another. The problem with this concept of God as concerned but uninvolved is that it leaves a vacuum to be filled by whatever god we create, the nation, the economy, academia, science.
But then something happens: an inexplicable cure; a life is transformed; an impossibility occurs and then we struggle with the thought that God isn’t as inactive or disengaged as we once believed. Then we realize that our problem with God is not that God isn’t involved, doesn’t heal, doesn’t care but that God doesn’t intervene precisely when we want.
As I stated, this is Palm/Passion Sunday, the beginning of Holy Week, the suffering of Jesus. He came, but not the way we wanted him to come. We wanted him to come on a war horse; he came riding on a donkey. Like Peter, we wanted him to live and still do; to fix everything, the governments, the rulers, the broken, the sick, but instead, he went to the Temple to pray. Like Judas we wanted him to organize the revolution; to drive the Romans away; to restore Israel the way it used to be under David. He went to the upper room, to break bread and drink wine. We wanted and we prayed that he would change everything, but he didn’t say a mumblin’ word; got himself whipped, stripped and crucified/
It wasn’t that Jesus didn’t do anything, he just didn’t do what we and his followers wanted him to do, when we wanted him to. It wasn’t that he didn’t intervene, but that he rode on a donkey healed some, not all; can’t understand it. Can we worship a God as this? Can we lay our lives before this one who acts, as God must act, unencumbered by our personal needs? Will we follow him this week? Will you? Will I? For somehow through it all, new life does come. In the meantime, there will be suffering and there will be healing and there will be accompaniment; we shall not be alone. This is our hope, this is our prayer. At least that’s the way I see it! Thanks be to God