Sunday, July 8, 2018

7-8-18 “God is Love3” (to the 3rd power)




7-8-18    “God is Love3” (to the 3rd power)

   In an episode of the epic television series “The Twilight Zone,” a Chicago-style mobster of the 1920s, who lived a life of endless debauchery, is gunned down and we find him in the afterlife. There, he’s enjoying everything he ever wanted - all the things that he lied, stole, and otherwise lived a life of crime to acquire - wine, women, endless poker games where he just can’t lose, and more money than he can spend. In fact, in death he’s living it up. There’s an “angelic” presence, played by Sebastian Cabot, the butler from the show “Family Affair,” with him almost at his beckon call. It doesn’t take long, however, before he finds himself growing frustrated and increasingly bored with the tedium and lack of challenge with his lot in death. Turning to his other-worldly host, he says, “This is becoming boring. I don’t know how long I can take this. Maybe I should go down to the other place,” to which the angel replies, “This IS the other place.”

   Author Mark Dawidziak, in his new book, Everything I Need to Know I Learned in the Twilight Zone, points out that in that classic television series of the 1960s, the irony that played out in nearly every episode was that the foil in each show was paid back in spades with whatever it was they brought into the story. If they were a person who sought control, it was lack of control that did them in. If they were a person who elevated physical beauty to near idolatry, it was beauty that brought them crashing down. It’s a classic representation of the idea that we reap what we sow. So the irony in the episode about the gangster is that that which he pursued in his life through crime, violence, and reckless disregard of others turned out in the end not to be the heaven he thought it would be, but his eternal hell.

   We often don’t consider that possibility in the midst of our own pursuits of heaven - whether in the afterlife or in a “heaven on earth.” We have ideas of what heaven is or isn’t - some taken literally from scripture including mansions and streets of gold, and others taken from our earthly perception that “if this or that isn’t there it can’t be heaven” (read that for me as, “if there are no golf courses, it’s not heaven!”).

   So while we won’t know what heaven is like until we get there, the French philosopher, paleontologist, geologist, Jesuit priest and theologian Pierre Teilhard de Chardin wrote that “the physical structure of the universe is love.” And picking up on that understanding, Fr. Richard Rohr writes that, “If a loving Creator started this whole thing—the Big Bang, the evolution of diverse and beautiful life forms—then there has to be a ‘DNA connection,’ as it were, between the One who creates and what is created. The basic template of reality is Trinitarian, it’s relational. God is relationship.” And he goes on to say that the Hebrew writer of Genesis used plural pronouns for some wonderful reason when describing God’s words in Creation, “Let us create in our own image, in the likeness of ourselves.” 

   So the “DNA connection” that Rohr refers to is between the Creator and the creation and reflects not only the make-up of the Creator but the nature of the Creator as well. We know the nature of God as Trinitarian, right? The three-in-one nature or relationship of God as Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer in relationship with the Christ and the Holy Spirit. And de Chardin confirms in his writing what the author of 1 John tells us in his, that the structure of the universe has the same DNA as the one who created it, the one who is love. So God is love, and that DNA fingerprint of God is found in and on everything in all of Creation - from the heavens to the earth and everything in between.

   In our reading for today, the elder gets to the point of what he has been leading us to since chapter 1: God is love. In fact, he so wants to make this point clear to us that he says it twice, in verse 8 and again in verse 16; God is love. And with that claim of who and how God is framed within our trinitarian understanding of God as the loving relationship of three-in-one, then the elder’s words take possession of us: “the person who does not love, does not know God.” And that claim should produce a hard swallow and nervous downcast eyes within each of us, because who among us does not “not love” someone?  
   Lest we forget, love as used in scripture is less about an emotion or feeling and more about action. Loving another, loving God, is as much something we do as it is something we feel. So that resonates with us as we hear the elder’s continued message: “This is love: it is not that we loved God, but that God loved us.” God took action for us. God gave us love. God gave us love in Jesus Christ and God gave us love in all of creation. 
   And he goes on, Dear friends, if God loved us this way, we also ought to love each other. 12 No one has ever seen God. If we love each other, God remains in us and [God’s] love is made perfect in us. 13 This is how we know we remain in [God] and [God] remains in us…” It’s a conditional statement: “IF we love each other, God remains in us and God’s love is made perfect in us.” IF we love each other. The alternative, then, is also true. IF WE DO NOT love each other, then God’s love DOES NOT remain in us. 

   Now, I know your heads might be churning a bit. 
I can hear that question forming in your thoughts: “Pastor Jay, you always preach Romans 8 that says ‘nothing can separate us from the love of God,’ but now you’re saying that if we don’t love each other God’s love doesn’t remain in us.” How can that be?
   Well, I’m glad you asked. Let me come at that from a different direction to see if it helps. Have you ever accidentally taken a drink of milk or taken a bite of food only to realize too late that it had spoiled? Something had changed in its nature, in its biological or chemical makeup that made it no longer edible or at least palatable, right? Or try this one, have you ever had an encounter with, oh let’s say a pastor, who in the midst of a bad moment or a bad day, said or did something that didn’t seem very pastoral? 
Unlike the curdled milk, which gave way to a natural biological process that is part of its nature, the aforementioned pastor in that moment, didn’t change his or her nature, but momentarily denied it. As Richard Rohr puts it, as humans we sometimes deny our true selves - our true nature as beloved children of God, as the beloved community of God - and give in to our false selves when we deny the nature of God that is created in us from the beginning. We do that, he suggests, when we fail to love each other as God created us to. It is a denial of the nature of God within us; the DNA connection between God and all of creation; the image of God in which we are all created. 
It doesn’t mean that God no longer loves us, it means that in those moments we are not fully loving God. 

   Why do we do this? We claim that we always love God, but to paraphrase the elder, actions speak louder than words. Often, if we really think about it, our failure to love God comes down to a fear of something or someone. Greed, for example, often manifests itself as a result of a fear of running out, of not having enough, or that someone else is going to get more than us. 
Xenophobia, the fear of strangers or those who are not like us, often comes from a lack of understanding, a lack of relationship with the very people we fear. 
Hate of another is often the result of a personal, deep-seated fear of inadequacy. 
Consumerism, materialism, idolatry are often born out of a fear or lack of trust in God, that God won’t really provide all that we need, or particularly all that we want, so we put the acquisition of things above God.

  
Our scripture addresses this, though, saying, 
God is love, and those who remain in love remain in God and God remains in them. This is how love has been perfected in us, so that we can have confidence on the Judgment Day…” Note he says so that we can have confidence, not fear, “because we are exactly the same as God is in this world.” We are made in the image, with the same DNA, as God. And it continues, “There is no fear in love, but perfect love drives out fear, because fear expects punishment. The person who is afraid has not been made perfect in love. 19 We love because God first loved us. 20 If anyone says, I love God, and hates a brother or sister, he is a liar, because the person who doesn’t love a brother or sister who can be seen can’t love God, who can’t be seen. 
21 This commandment we have from him: Those who claim to love God ought to love their brother and sister also.”
   Because love is the true nature of God, and we are made in God’s image, it is also the nature of our true selves as well. Love in relationship with God and with one another. 

In John’s gospel, Jesus says to the disciples, 
“As the Father loved me, I too have loved you. 
Remain in my love. 10 If you keep my commandments, you will remain in my love, just as I kept my Father’s commandments and remain in his love. 
11 I have said these things to you so that my joy will be in you and your joy will be complete.”

   Jesus said that just as God loved him, he has loved them. And then he commands them, and us, to love our neighbors in the same way. And in another place he tells them that God will send the Holy Spirit as a companion to help them, and us. It is in that relationship that we experience the never-ending, all-encompassing love of God. 
   As Rohr suggests, “…here love characterizes God, whose expressions of love create relationships between God’s self and others. The love that defines who God is, finds expression in what God does through [the life, teachings, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ]. 
The highest manifestation of love is to lay down one’s life for another (Jn 15:13). [To demonstrate that God’s love is more powerful than fear, more powerful than hate, more powerful than empire, more powerful than torture, more powerful than death,] Jesus laid down his life and was, in turn, lifted up by God.”

   God’s love is “perfected” in us, the passage says, when we love one another.  The Greek words translated here as perfected are based on the word “telos,” which means “goal,” or “purpose,” “desire,” or even “God’s preferred future.” The idea is that God’s love reaches its goal or desired end when it creates relationships of love with people among people - when we live into our true selves as we were created to be. As an abstraction, that is when we disconnect from God by giving in to our false selves, love falls short of that goal. It is imperfect. 

   There is hope, however. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. observed that “the arc of the moral universe is long, but bends toward justice.” 
That is, God’s desired end will win out in the long run. However, we live in the short run. Protestant pastor and political leader Rev. Dr. Willam Barber addressed that, saying, As Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. saw clearly in the last years of his life, we face a real choice between chaos and community—we need a moral revolution. If that was true fifty years ago, then we must be clear today: America needs a moral revival to bring about beloved community.”
   And what Barber goes on to suggest is that this “moral revival” is a natural outgrowth of realizing how connected we already are: what we do unto others or to the earth, we really do to ourselves.That is, when we sow anger, we reap anger; when we sow hate and fear, that is our harvest as well. 
In an almost Twilight Zone kind of way, whatever we bring into the story will ultimately decide our fate in the story.
   William Barber writes, “The main obstacle to beloved community continues to be the fear that people in power have used for generations to divide and conquer God’s children who are, whatever our differences, all in the same boat.” When the love of God finds expression in human love, there the goal is reached.

   I want to share part of an article I read recently by a young woman named Madisyn Taylor. She’s not an overtly religious or faith-based writer, more like one of those Spiritual-But-Not-Religious folks I told you about last week, but her words preach. And she writes, Love is often presented as the opposite of fear, but true love is not opposite anything. 
True love is far more powerful than any negative emotions, as it is the environment in which all things arise. Negative emotions/actions are like sharks swimming in the ocean of love. All things beautiful and fearful, ugly and kind, powerful and small, come into existence, do their thing, and disappear within the context of this great ocean. At the same time, they are made of the very love in which they swim and can never be separated. We are made of this love and live our whole lives at one with it, whether we know it or not.
   “It is only the illusion that we are separate from this great love that causes us to believe that choosing anything other than love makes sense or is even possible. In the relative, dualistic world of positive and negative, darkness and light, male and female, we make choices and we learn from them… 
Underlying these relative choices, though, is the choice to be conscious of what we are, which is love, or to be unconscious of it. When we choose to be conscious of it, we choose love. We will still exist in the relative world of opposites and choices and cause and effect, and we will need to make our way here, but doing so with an awareness that we are all made of this love will enable us to be more playful, more joyful, more loving and wise, as we make our way. Ultimately, the choices we make will shed light on the love that makes us all one, enabling those who have forgotten to return to the source.
   “This world makes it easy to forget this great love, which is part of why we are here. We are here to remember and, when we forget, to remember again to choose love.”

   This fourth chapter of 1 John is one of the Bible’s great “love” chapters. At its core is that “God is love” (4:8, 16), and we share that perfect love modeled in the Trinity - God’s love to the third power. God is the subject and love is the descriptor. God is a living being, whose identity and nature is defined by love. Love characterizes God, whose expressions of love create relationships between God’s self and others. The love that defines who God is, finds expression in what God does through Jesus Christ, and that then is displayed to all of creation by those of us who claim to be Christ’s followers. The moral revolution that the world needs will come only when we as the beloved children of God, as Christ’s hands and feet on earth, live into the DNA of God that is birthed within us and live into our true selves. When we do that, when we choose love over fear, or hate, or anger, or anything that denies our true selves, then we can offer HOPE to the world. We do that when we choose to:

Be HOSPITABLE. Welcome others as God in Christ has welcomed us. When we reach out and receive all persons. All hunger for something more and better than the world is offering. No one is outside the love of God. 
OFFER them Christ. The Jesus story is an irresistible story. Take the opportunity to learn, to be shaped and formed as Jesus followers, and then live into the image of who God created you to be to the world. 
PRACTICE: Practice your faith. Participate in prayer, in study, in service, in worship; talk about your faith and be encouraged to put your faith into action. Be invitational and not just informational.
ENGAGE: Engage with the community, with the neighbors and  neighborhood around us. Build relationships and connect the Gospel and the love of God to activities going on in our community.


   Offer HOPE and remember: Perfect love casts out fear. In a time of great fear, focus upon the love of God. Hold before all people the love of God we have experienced in and through Jesus. I pray that you will be courageous, not cautious. Hold before all people the hope we have in and through Jesus Christ. Remember, God has the final word. And that word is LOVE. Amen.

Monday, July 2, 2018

7-1-18 “God’s Word Embodied”





7-1-18  “God’s Word Embodied”   


   We talked in week 1 of this series that one of the things the author of 1 John is trying to address in this letter is the growing heresy of docetism. 
And you’ll remember that docetism grew out of the dualistic idea that spiritual things were good, material things were evil, and that therefore Jesus could not have had a material or physical body because that would have been evil, therefore Jesus only seemed or appeared to have a human body. And this idea goes against a central tenet of the Christian faith, that in Jesus Christ, God took on a human form, that God is most fully revealed to us in the person and body of Jesus. We call this incarnation. And we identify this idea with Jesus when we use the name Emmanuel for Jesus, which means literally, God with us. Jesus is the embodiment of all that God is - he gives God form.
   And that’s good, because nobody has ever seen God. Our words are certainly inadequate to even begin to describe God, so knowing that we can understand who and how God is by looking at Jesus helps us to better grasp the nature of God. In fact, the definition of the word embodiment means both to personify, exemplify, to make concrete, or to provide with a body, to incarnate. So when we say that Jesus is the embodiment of God, we can understand that both in the physical sense as well as in the exemplary sense. 

   In John’s gospel, the writer begins his writing by naming Jesus as the Word of God. Word of God, in this sense, isn’t about a collection of alphabetic letters that form words; the Greek translated as Word is logos, which means the wisdom, the plan, the embodiment of God. And it follows then, that if Jesus is the embodiment of God, then Jesus is the embodiment of God’s love. If, as the author of our epistle claims, God is love, then the same can and must be said about Jesus - Jesus is love. And to take that one step further - Jesus is love in the flesh, love incarnate - Jesus is love embodied. He shows us what love looks like and what faith in the God who is love looks like, as a human being. 
   In the gospel passage we read today, Jesus tells the disciples that God will send a companion after he is gone, referring to the Holy Spirit. In our passage from 1 John for today, the author warns however,  “don’t believe every spirit. Test the spirits to see if they are from God because many false prophets have gone into the world. This is how you know if a spirit comes from God: every spirit that confesses that Jesus Christ has come as a human is from God, and every spirit that doesn’t confess Jesus [as a human is inferred here] is not from God.”
   It’s the battle against docetism. If someone says Jesus was not human, then they are a false prophet, or as the elder puts it, they are the antichrist. 
And as New Testament scholar Rolf Jacobsen puts it,
   “The writer [of 1 John] uses the word “antichrist” for the view he opposes. In the popular imagination, the antichrist is a political figure who is coming to dominate the world at the end of the age. But in 1 John, that is not the case. 
The Greek prefix “anti” means both “against” and “substitute for.” The writer uses the term “antichrist” for a form of the gospel that circulated in his own time. It is “against” Christ because it offers a thoroughly spiritualized “substitute for” Christ. And the writer notes that the world finds the disembodied message more appealing than the incarnate one.”
   Jacobsen says, “The basic issue, according to chapter 4, is whether spiritual claims are centered in the Word that Jesus embodied. For the writer, the incarnate Word cannot be reduced to some spiritual abstraction. Divine love is not simply an idea. It takes tangible form in the life Jesus lived and the death that he died.”  In other words, God’s love was embodied so our faith, too, must be embodied.

   Have you heard of the term “spiritual but not religious?” It’s a term usually used to describe people who hold some kind of faith or spirituality but who are not part of a church or any organized religion. I always say I’m not part of an organized religion either, I’m Methodist, but SBNRs, as they’re often referred to, don’t profess a religion so much as a belief that there is something more than just our day-to-day existence, there is a greater force in the universe with which they desire to connect. And while some wouldn’t necessarily use this term, we call that force God. And there are some people, both SBNRs and so-called “religious” folk, who prefer their faith to be more “spiritual” in nature than physical. That is, they prefer to pray, to meditate, or perhaps to read spiritually. Maybe their primary faith or spiritual forms of expression are to journal, use prayer beads, walk prayer labyrinths or something similar,  but for many their faith or spirituality is a head and heart thing. We might say for some their faith is “inspired,” that is it has life breathed into it, but it is not so much “embodied,” it may not necessarily have hands and feet attached to it.

   Now, we see that in some very traditionally religious people too. Do you know anyone whose faith is all about the next life - forget about this one? People who claim that the word BIBLE is an acronym for Basic Instructions Before Leaving Earth? Or, as some refer to them, people who are so heavenly-minded that they’re no earthly good? For some, the whole point of faith, religion, whatever you want to call it, is to punch a ticket to heaven in the next life and say so long to this one. It’s almost an escapist approach to religion. That’s not what Jesus was about though.

   Jesus was all about inviting people into the Kingdom of Heaven here and now, the Reign of God that was present in their midst. His was a very touchy feely, hands-on embodiment of what the love of God and the Kingdom of Heaven were all about. Jesus’ faith was grounded in prayer, but it wasn’t limited to prayer. Prayer was how he got himself in tune with God, and then he went out and embodied that “in-tune-ment” with and for others. His was not a faith that was limited to head and heart, but was expressed through his hands and feet as well - by walking with others, touching and healing, breaking bread with others. He told his disciples that he came as a servant and that love of him and love of God looks like serving others. It was a physical, incarnate, embodied faith. It was about a love that was sacrificial.

   The book, “Chicken Soup for the Soul” recounts a now familiar story on courage of a young girl who is dying of leukemia and needs a blood transfusion. Her 5 year old brother is the ideal donor so the parents ask him if he would be willing to donate blood so that his sister will live. He thinks about it and agrees. The two children are hooked up to IVs in side-by-side beds and a pint of blood is drawn from the little boy and transfused into the little girl. As her color begins to return he becomes quiet and ashen, and turning to the doctors asks, “Will I begin to die soon?”
   The little boy, misunderstanding what was being ask of him, was willing to give his own life for the sake of his sister. Now this story, this parable has circulated in one form or another, in different countries and cultures for decades, and was even portrayed in a Mary Pickford film over 80 years ago - so whether it really happened is not the point. The point of the story - in spite of the fact that in misunderstanding what was being asked of him the little boy could only have concluded that his parents loved his sister more than him - is that he was willing to act sacrificially on his love for his sister. It wasn’t just kind words or platitudes, he didn’t just offer his “thoughts and prayers” - he was willing to die that she might live. 

   An “embodied” faith doesn’t necessarily ask us to die so that someone else might live - although it might - it asks us to be the body of Christ in the world. 
It asks us, as the tome goes, “to live more simply so that others might simply live.” It asks us to love the stranger, the immigrant, the sojourner, the alien among us, because, as Deuteronomy puts it, “we were once strangers in a strange land.” It asks us to not judge others because we haven’t walked a step in their shoes. It asks us to trust in God’s goodness, and to love God more than we love money. It asks us to make sure that those who are on the margins at least have enough: enough food, enough clothing, enough healthcare, enough shelter.  It asks us to embody for others the love that Christ embodied for us. Christ modeled divine love in that he knew that his teachings about God, about the law, about religion, about empire, about inclusivity could very well result in his own death, but he went ahead anyway. That’s what sacrificial love looks like.


   Today is Communion Sunday. In Holy Communion we remember, we memorialize the sacrificial love that Jesus both shared and modeled. In fact, we use the word remembrance because it has a deeper meaning than just remembering. Remembering invites us to call to mind, to search our memory for the “Jesus’ Last Supper” file that is stored in there somewhere. 
Remembrance, on the other hand, means to reconnect, to re-embrace, to re-immerse ourselves in the experience to the point that we are there, that it is real to us in the moment and not just a story that we’ve heard. 
This bread and this juice embodies the love of God that was incarnate in Jesus Christ. When we receive this Holy Meal, it is intended to feed us, but not just so we can feel good, not just so the growling in our stomach can be sated until we get to our favorite lunch spot. It is intended to feed us in the Spirit of the God who in the body of Jesus Christ told his followers to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, heal the sick, visit the imprisoned. Not just the ones who we think “deserve” it, but all of them. “You give them something to eat,” he told the disciples when they were overwhelmed by the numbers of people in need and saw only what they lacked in resources. This meal from Christ’s table invites us not only to take Christ’s body into our body, but also to allow it to embody us to be Christ’s body in the world. 
   And how can we be Christ’s body in the world? How can we serve as Christ desires for us to serve?

How about helping at Vacation Bible School
Or the Food Pantry
the WSFS   
Community Meal
Mustard Seed Homeless outreach
Mow someone’s grass
Help clean a room or windows, or pull weeds at the church
Visit a shut-in or a nursing home
Write cards to shut-ins or to those not here today
Write or call your representatives on behalf of the poor or the marginalized
You can give blood
You can give money
You can embrace a stranger and be the face of Christ to them
   What if when the next time you go to a restaurant or go through a drive-thru, you pick up the cost of a meal for another person in the restaurant or the person in line behind you? Not a person who you think “deserves” it, but someone who needs it, or would appreciate it. 
   That would be a real life, hands-on way to embody the love of Christ. That would be a great model of what it means to be in communion with God. 
Why not embody your faith by paying forward the love og God in remembrance of Jesus Christ? Amen.



Sunday, June 24, 2018

6-24-18 Sermon “God is Light”




6-24-18 Sermon   “God is Light”

   I’ve shared with you before that I like to sleep in as total darkness as is possible. So in order to do that, sometimes I use this sleep mask. If Lynn wants to read and I’m ready to sleep, I just slip this on and it’s as though I were in a deep, dark cave. Zero light gets in. In fact, just this week when we were going to bed and I turned the bedside light out, I commented to Lynn that I liked this moment best because that was as dark as our room gets. As our eyes adjust, as our pupils dilate, it appears to be lighter in the room. As we grow accustomed to the darkness, as we acclimate to it, we become more comfortable with it. So when we get up in the middle of the night - as many of us do - often we don’t need to turn on a light, we’re so used to trudging that well-worn path from bedside to bathroom in the dark. 
We know how many steps it is, we know where to walk in order to avoid kicking our bare toes against the bed post or the corner of the dresser. In fact, you may not even need to really open your eyes. It’s a trip we’ve made many, many times and have become so used to, so accustomed to, that we can literally navigate the path in our sleep. 
   Rather than a choice, though, sometimes darkness is seemingly forced upon us. We find ourselves immersed in it, not by choice, but because situations or events act as blinders, as masks, blocking our ability to see the light. Tragedy or loss can plunge us into a darkness as black as a starless, moonless night. Drowning in this soupy murkiness, we lose our bearings, we step off the familiar paths - forgetting that the light is still there; the light is always there. And as a result, we move, we act, we respond from a perspective of a perceived total darkness.

   Our writer, the elder you’ll remember is how he refers to himself, says that “God is light, and in God there is no darkness at all.” But what does he mean by that - that God is light? Certainly it’s a metaphor, but what does it mean to say that God is light? And even more basic, what really is light?

   Well, second things first. Light is electromagnetic radiation made up of waves of varying lengths. All the light that we see falls in the range of what is called “visible light,” and is made up of what we perceive as the colors of the rainbow - red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. Beyond the visible range, though, there are longer and shorter waves of light, of electromagnetic radiation, that human eyes are unable to see but that other animals can see. So think about that for a moment - there are colors in the world, outside of the possibilities given to us in the biggest box of Crayola crayons, that we cannot even imagine because our eyes cannot see them. Our vision as humans is limited to the colors of the spectrum that are in the visible light range. But these are just a segment, a fragment of all the light and colors that exist in the infrared, ultraviolet, x-ray, microwave, and gamma ray spectrums. 
   The colors we see are created by the stimulation of the cones in our eyes by that electromagnetic radiation. The color we perceive is based on the wavelength of the light that is reflected off the object we see - with all other wavelengths being absorbed by the object. 
This carpet reflects back the red wavelengths of light but absorbs the others, so we see red. So, thinking about it another way, without light there is no color. 
That dresser you seek to avoid, that bedpost you maneuver around when making that midnight trek to the toilet in total darkness, have no color at all. 
The presence  of color depends totally on the existence, the presence, the reflection of light. No light means no color.

   So now, let’s return to the first question, what does it mean to say that God is light? Well, understanding that all of our words about God are inadequate and can only be metaphor, if we take the properties we know about light and apply them to God we can understand that God is bigger, greater, more expansive than the limited amount that we can perceive, right? Like the colors outside our visible range, God extends beyond what we know, or think we know, even beyond what we can imagine. We can also understand that as light is broadly diverse across a spectrum of colors both visible and invisible, that diversity is also reflected in God’s nature as well as God’s creation. God has created things, life forms, even places that we have never seen and cannot even imagine in our limited human capacity..

   I have shared with you before that darkness in and of itself is not a thing - it represents absence, and exists only as the absence of light. You cannot create darkness independent of simply removing light. This is true in science and nature, just as it is true in faith. The writer says that if we claim to have fellowship with God, who is light, but live in the darkness, then we are lying - to ourselves and to God. So, let’s take a moment to consider how do we live in darkness? What do you think it means, what does it look like, to live in darkness?

 (ASK THE CONGREGATION THIS QUESTION?)
to live with anger
to live in fear or mistrust
to live in guilt
to judge others
to fail to forgive others
to live with hatred
to live with racism/sexism/homophobia
to live with xenophobia - fear of the other, those not like you
to live with misogyny
to live with bigotry
to live with a sense of entitlement
to live with a sense of moral superiority
to live in hopelessness

   So what the author is saying is that if we say we have a relationship with God, when we claim that Jesus is our Lord and Savior, but we hold these things in our lives, choose to live with these things, these feelings, any of them, then we are not in fellowship with God, that we fool ourselves or are just flat lying to ourselves and to the world. We may be talking the talk, but we’re not walking the walk. As Naomi shared in her message a couple of weeks ago, “we’re quick to claim Jesus as our Savior, but we pick and choose when and where we allow Jesus to be Lord.”

   The elder doesn’t leave us hanging on that precipice though, writing “But if we live in the light in the same way as God is in the light, we have fellowship with each other, and Jesus…cleanses us from every sin.” If we live in the light, we are cleansed from our sin. If we reject the darkness, our sin is washed away. If we take off our blinders, our masks, to see and embrace the love of God, the presence of God in all of those people, places, and things that we’ve never seen or have denied before from within our limited field of vision, then we will be cleansed from our sin. When we embrace the light and reject the darkness, only then are we in fellowship with God, in fellowship with Jesus Christ, only then can we truly live in the light.

   And that sounds great - that sounds wonderful! Hallelujah! But in the warm afterglow of our newly realized salvation, God’s light has revealed another question that we have to wrestle with - what is sin? You might remember a song from the late 60s, early 70s era called “Spirit in the Sky.” It was a popular song by a singer named Norman Greenbaum. I don’t know if he ever had another big song after this one, but he had some interesting lyrics in the refrain of that song as it pertains to sin that, as theologian Debra Freeman put it, “is perhaps present in the church, but is certainly common in the world.” Greenbaum sang:
Never been a sinner, I’ve never sinned
I’ve got a friend in Jesus

   And I guess I would offer that if he thinks he’s never sinned, then Jesus must have been more than just a friend to him. I don’t know about you, but I couldn’t count all the ways I’ve probably sinned today! 
In 1 John, the elder writes that if we say we don’t have any sin, that if we claim we have never sinned, we make God out to be a liar, and God’s truth is not in us.That is, we are living in darkness. 

   Sin is, at its core, the absence of God’s light. Sin is sometimes defined as that which separates us from God. But in Paul’s letter to the church at Rome he tells us that nothing can separate us from God’s love, so I have difficulty with using that definition of Sin. Others have defined sin as putting ourselves above God, or placing our will ahead of God’s will. In the book, “What is the Bible,” by Rob Bell that we’re reading for Summer Book Clumb, he shares a definition that suggests that sin is that which disrupts the peace and harmony God desires for the world. Those are both better understandings, I think. There is systemic Sin in the world that is often equated with the idea of original sin - the “isms” that we often talk about of racism, sexism, etc., along with greed and all those other things we listed when we talked earlier about what it looks like to live in darkness. Those things are Sin, with a capital S, and represent a state of sinfulness found in the world.
    Often, though, when we think about Sin we aren’t thinking of these bigger systemic things, we’re focused on the actions of a person or a group that we consider sinful or as breaking God’s law. In fact, it’s easier to point our fingers at this person’s actions, that person’s words, another person’s misjudgments and call that sin than it is to confess our role in keeping alive, supporting, or promoting the larger systemic sin that hurts so many people - sometimes because while that sin hurts someone else it benefits us. 
   For example, racism and other isms tells us that if we can instill enough fear of black people, if we can convince enough white people that Latino immigrants are all murderers, rapists, or are here to take their jobs, if we can convince enough straight people that gay marriage is going to somehow hurt their marriage, then “WE” will be okay, regardless of what happens to “THEM.” 
That’s what systemic or institutional sin looks like. My male privilege, our white privilege is sin when it results in someone who doesn’t look like us being treated as a criminal or somehow “less than” us. Assuming that you have the right to comment on another person’s appearance or their body, grab or touch their body, or try to control their body is sin. What has been going on with immigrant families and children on our southern border for the past several months is sin. It is darkness. More than murder, or adultery, or anything else we like to point to that is carried out by individuals - nations and peoples are complicit in systemic sin. They represent the absence, the darkening of the light of God. 
   Now, some will argue that some of these are matters of law and order, misquoting scripture to make their point. But lest we forget, Jesus broke the law and supported the breaking of the law when necessary; about adultery and those penalties; about the Sabbath; cleanliness laws, just to name a few. Jesus never denied that he broke the laws of Israel and the Roman Empire; he claimed that these were unjust laws, and not of God. And as Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. so eloquently pointed out, not only do we have no moral obligation to follow unjust laws, we do, in fact, have a moral obligation to disobey unjust laws. Systemic sin, whether perpetrated on a border, in the urban centers of our cities, or in our schools and workplaces, lives and breeds in unjust laws where the light of God has been blocked, covered, masked, or placed under a bushel. Unjust laws develop out of and envelop us in darkness. But Christ calls us to come out of that darkness and into the light of God that is broader, and brighter, and more all-encompassing that we can even imagine.

   The elder, in the first two verses of chapter two tells us, 
“My little children, I’m writing these things to you so that you don’t sin. But if you do sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous one. He is God’s way of dealing with our sins, not only ours but the sins of the whole world.”
   This passage is not solely about human sinfulness. If it were there would be no good news here. Rather, the author points to the nature of who God is: “God is light and in God there is no darkness at all.” The Good News of the Gospel hangs on this gracious truth and revolves around this all-encompassing, sunlight-surpassing, sin-forgiving, darkness-busting light that emanates from God, and that meets us in the person of Jesus Christ. As the Rev. Zan Holmes told us in a sermon at annual conference earlier this month,  
“Jesus meets us where we are, but treats us as though we were where we were supposed to be.” 
   Where we are supposed to be is walking in the light of Christ as the body of Christ, as both individuals and as the church, made in the image of the God who is light and who is love. We are called to let our light so shine before the world that there is no doubt about who - and whose - we are; beloved Children of the God who is the light of the world. Amen.



Sunday, June 17, 2018

6-17-18 “God is Love: Who Is Jesus?”




6-17-18 “God is Love: Who Is Jesus?”

   So I asked Naomi to preach about the love chapter from 1 Corinthians last week as a lead-in of sorts to where we’re going for the next four weeks. 1 Corinthians 13 is THE most popular result when you Google search for “wedding scriptures” or “love scriptures.” When you ask people what the Bible says about love, most people come to that passage, remembering Paul’s word, “love is patient, love is kind.” And that is a bit ironic, because if you really look at the passage, it’s really not about the love between two people at all - it’s about the love of God, and this passage is best understood in that way. But that said, if you believe, as I do and as 1 John affirms, that God IS love and that we are created in God’s image, then that within each of us that is “of God,” is also at one with God’s love. So in that sense, what it says about love in general holds true for us as well. More on that idea in a moment.
   I performed two weddings in May, and with both of those couples I met for pre-marital conversations three times. And part of what we talked about was the book The Five Love Languages, which I asked the couples to read together. One thing that the author points out in that book is that “while the word love permeates society…it is also a most confusing word” because of how we use it. And as I alluded to last week, in one breath we might say to another, “I love you,” and then in the next “I love tacos,” or pizza, or OSU football, or whatever.
 And hopefully we don’t mean the same things when we use that same word. 

   So before we even get to the question that is posed in the title of the message, we must first tackle the question, “what do we mean by the word love?” And more importantly, what does this word mean in scripture? While Psychology Today says there are seven different types of love, in the Bible we primarily deal with three: eros, which is romantic or sexual love; philia, which is love for another, love of family, and sometimes thought of as brotherly or sisterly love; and then agape love, the word used exclusively to describe God’s love - 
a love that is total, complete, self-giving, and all-encompassing.
   The word love appears in the Common English Bible 792 times, 25 of those in 1 John, and is only exceeded in the New Testament by John’s gospel, where it appears 40 times. I tell you that to help reinforce the idea that love is a consistent, if not THE most consistent theme found throughout scripture, from beginning to end, from Genesis to Revelation. But the book we know as 1 John goes further than the other biblical books. While both the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament tell us to love God and to love our neighbor, and then show what that kind of love looks like, the writer of 1 John states forthrightly, in chapter 4, that GOD IS LOVE, and that if we do not love then we do not know God. With that blanket declaration on the table, then, over the next four weeks we’ll explore exactly what the author says about that and what he means by it. 
For now, though, let’s talk for a minute about this book, or letter, or essay, or whatever this and its two companion writings actually are

   The books, 1, 2, and 3 John are commonly described or categorized as letters, epistles in Bible-speak, but they don’t really look or read like letters, at least not like other letters in the Bible or letters that we might write. There are no greetings or salutations, there’s no addressee, and no conclusion or farewell sign-off of any kind. So while they’re called and characterized as letters, they bear no more resemblance to a letter than does a 140 character tweet on Twitter. 
   We also hear them referred to and think of them as books, but they really aren’t very long - not as we would expect a book, even a book of the Bible to be. They’re among the shortest writings in the entire Bible. So, thinking of them as books is a bit of stretch - they’re shorter than short stories - so maybe they’re more comparable to essays.
   And while these writings are titled 1, 2, and 3 John, we really don’t know with any certainty who penned them. Tradition links them to the Apostle John, commonly thought to perhaps also be the author of the Gospel of John, but scholars go both ways on that. There are enough similarities in themes, grammar usage, and writing style to suggest that it could be the same author, but at the same time there are also enough differences in those same things to throw authorship into question as well. Nowhere, in any of the the three letters does the writer provide a name or state who he is - and it most certainly is a he - only referring to himself in the second and third letters as “the elder,” a title that the apostle John never used to refer to himself in the Gospel. The best guess of most scholars is that these three letters were written by a follower of John, someone who was part of the apostle’s community, who was accustomed to and shared much of John’s thinking and word usage. Scholars believe that the letters were likely written a decade or more after the gospel, which would date them at the very end of the first century or even in the first decade of the second century. And that timing would make sense when we consider what it is that appears to have prompted the writing of 1 John in the first place - addressing the question of “Who is Jesus?”

   And this question has been a running theme throughout the New Testament, but most especially in the four gospels. We remember priests and pharisees asking at various times, “who is that man” that he does this, or says that? The disciples even ponder this, when in the midst of a storm, Jesus calms the sea and they wonder “who is this man that the seas and the winds listen to him and obey?” Jesus encourages their thinking about this subject when he asks the Twelve, “who do the people say that I am?” and then follows with “and who do YOU say that I am?” And we remember Peter’s response, “you are the Christ,” that is, the messiah, or the anointed one.
   In the aftermath of the great feeding story as told in the 6th chapter of John’s gospel, Jesus goes back and forth with the crowd and with this disciples about who he was and what it meant to be his disciple, and John reports that the number of followers dwindled after that, and even that some of the Twelve struggled with Jesus’ words and the depth of their commitment to him. 
   Theologian Ross West, considering these questions, suggests that,  “The crowd and even Jesus’ closest disciples were struggling with what is easily the most important question of anyone’s life—indeed, of all history: Who is Jesus?
   “Really, who is Jesus? It’s a question that when seriously considered brings about a division in the ranks of every group who asks it. It even brings about a division within our own hearts. Who is Jesus? The answers vary. For some, Jesus is the great teacher. He was a great individual with great ideas, who has contributed much by word and example. Jesus can be revered as one of the great teachers of history, certainly alongside Aristotle, Plato, Buddha, and Moses. Jesus is to be respected and even loved. 
For others, Jesus is the model person, the best person who ever lived, and we should strive to imitate Jesus—as long as we don’t perhaps take it too far.
   “For some, as in Jesus’ day, Jesus is the Messiah, but a worldly Messiah, as Jesus was to the crowd on those two days described in John 6. They wanted him to solve their problems, both there and thereafter. They were impressed that, like Moses of old, Jesus had supplied them with food in the wilderness. “Hey, we can follow a guy like this!”
   And West suggests that, “the overwhelming answer of the scriptures and of the church…through the centuries has been that Jesus is more than these descriptions or any others we might list. Who is Jesus? He is a human being, the person in whom God was uniquely present. Somehow, as Paul said, ‘In Christ God was reconciling the world to himself’ (2 Cor. 5:19). We may not be able to state the how of this truth very well, but we revel in its reality. Somehow, this person Jesus, who was flesh and blood, was the Person in whom the God of Israel and the universe was uniquely present.
   But then West implores us to not stop at that, to go further. “Give a little more thought to this question: Who is Jesus? Jesus’ contemporaries knew Jesus first as a human being. The scriptures affirm this part of Jesus’ nature. He was human like us. Indeed, Jesus was fully human. In later writings of the New Testament, especially 1 John, the major issue was whether Jesus was fully human. That little letter begins with the affirmation that indeed Jesus was. The first verse states, “We declare to you what was from the beginning, what we have heard, what we have seen with our eyes, what we have looked at and touched with our hands” (1 John 1:1).”

   That last line is important to understanding 1 John -  “We declare to you what was from the beginning, what we have heard, what we have seen with our eyes, what we have looked at and touched with our hands” (1 John 1:1).” The author of 1 John is addressing a question of Christology - that is, the study of who is Jesus Christ? John’s Gospel approaches the question from what is considered a “high Christology,” meaning that it focuses primarily on the divine nature of Jesus. And you’ll understand what I mean if you think about how John’s gospel begins compared to Matthew and Luke, for example. Whereas Matthew and Luke begin with human birth stories of Jesus, John begins with a poetic discourse that places the Christ alongside God the Creator at the very brink of Creation - in the beginning, the beginning of EVERYTHING, of ALL THINGS. So, a “low Christology” focuses on the humanity of Jesus, a high Christology on the divinity of Jesus. And while the Gospel of John comes from a place of high Christology, the letter 1 John comes from a place of a lower Christology. And it does so for a very important reason: to rebut a rising heresy known as docetism.

   Docetism, from the Greek, dokein, meaning “to seem” or “to appear,” is the claim that Jesus did not have a physical human body, that Jesus was not really human at all, but only appeared as such. Such doctrines were quite popular in the early church, such as at the time of this writing, and were often joined to dualistic ideas that only the purely spiritual were good, and that physical things, matter and flesh for example, were evil. 
If matter is intrinsically evil, the thought went, then Jesus would not have a physical body, but only the appearance of one. 1 John 4:1-4 takes on claims of docetism as the opening salvo of this book. In fact, even within the Gospels themselves - written earlier than these letters - the many instances of Jesus’ eating - even after the resurrection - seem to be an attempt to refute docetism. Alongside docetism was the heresy of Marcionism, which, among other unbelievable things, held that the god YAHWEH of the Hebrew Bible and the God of Love in the New Testament were two very different Gods, and that Jesus was not physically born at all, but simply appeared as a mature man during the reign of Tiberius. So what we see happening later in the church, and most especially in the Apostle’s Creed, is a pushback against these kinds of belief that denied the humanity, the birth, and sufferings of Jesus. And they pushed back largely through the development of creedal affirmations that Jesus “was born of the virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead, and buried.”

   1 John seems to be taking on these kinds of heresies when it begins by claiming that this is about what they have seen with their own eyes and touched with their own hands. Jesus Christ was a human being, flesh and blood, God incarnate. That’s what incarnation is all about - God in the flesh. But we also understand incarnation more broadly. God is present, not just in the flesh of Jesus Christ, but in the church as well. With the indwelling of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, the church took on the role of the body of Christ. Whatever it is that God want to be done in the world, it is the role of the church to do that as the body of Christ. If God desires for the world to be fed, it is the church who is called to do that. If God desires for there to be peace in the world, it is the church who is called to lead the world to peace. It is God’s desire, God’s will, God’s preferred future that is to be enfleshed, carried out, incarnated in the life and acts, the mission and ministry of the church, not OUR will or desire that is substituted or superimposed onto God. 

   But beyond the church proper, incarnation takes place, not just in Jesus’ flesh or in the church as the body of Christ, but in our flesh as well, as individuals, as those who are created in the image of God. Scientists say our bodies are made up of so many dollars and cents worth of chemicals and elements and whatever. But did you realize that the proportion of those chemicals and elements in our physical bodies is the same as the proportion of those chemicals and elements in the known universe? The same proportion of carbon that makes up your body is found in comets and asteroids. The same proportion of magnesium is found in the human body, as the animal body, as the rings around Saturn, and so on. When God created everything, everything reflects God’s creation. When God created us in God’s image, God also created all of creation in God’s image. God is in us, we are made in the image of God. We’ll talk about this more when we get further into 1 John, but when we speak metaphorically about God’s body, the church as the body of Christ, and of creation being made in the image of God, we must understand that God's incarnation takes many forms within the biblical witness. God has always been and will continue to be present in human flesh as God's own body, in the physical body of Jesus that the elder referred to when he wrote that they had touched it with their own hands, and in the church that is the present-day institutional body of Christ. God is present in the world through spirit and through people who follow that spirit. God is incarnate in the world through believers and non-believers today because God’s presence is in all things. That’s part of what the elder wants us to understand. Yes, God was present in the physical body of Jesus of Nazareth, but also more than just there. The agape, all-encompassing, unimaginable, love of God that prompted God to create in the beginning, continues to be present in ways and in places that we grasp as well as in ways that are beyond our comprehension.
   Sometimes, to some people, it seems almost sacrilegious, even heretical, to think of Jesus as a human being who got thirsty, hungry, and tired, who experienced emotions like all of us. Jesus’ closest disciples, those who walked with him and talked with him, those who broke bread with him, tested his patience, loved him and betrayed him, had no trouble seeing Jesus like that, however. Neither should we. One of the most astounding verses in the Bible, one of the most powerfully unique claims of Christianity, is “The Word became flesh and lived among us” (John 1:14). Flesh!

   Who is Jesus? Jesus was a human being, fully a human being. The scriptures also affirm Jesus as fully divine. In ways we can only state and neither explain nor understand, the God of the universe was uniquely present in Jesus. This view of Jesus was no afterthought of the church after the days of the New Testament. It was not simply thought up and written down at a later church council. It is seen in the experiences of Jesus in the Gospels (see Matthew 16:16; Mark 1:11; 15:39), just as it is seen in the reflections of Jesus’ closest followers as they spoke and wrote of their experiences, in what would later become the New Testament. (Jn 20:31; Acts 2:32-33; Phil. 2:5-11; Col. 1:15-18; Heb. 1:1-4; 1 Jn 1:3; 2 Pet. 3:18; Rev. 1:4-5). And as the elder tells us, they wrote these things so that our joy may be complete. As the hymn tells us, “God is here! As we your people meet to offer praise and prayer, may we find in fuller measure what it is in Christ we share.”
   So, as we go from this place today, may your joy be made complete in knowing that God is with you and within you, even as you are the hands and feet, the body of Christ in God’s world. Amen.