Saturday, 24 April 2021
A Sermon for the Fourth Sunday of Easter (25/04/21): Corpus Delicti
Saturday, 17 April 2021
A Sermon for the Third Sunday of Easter (18/04/21): Peter Preaches
Peter PreachesActs
3:12-19
The
book of Acts contains a collection of early sermons preached by the
apostles in the weeks and years following Jesus’ resurrection. Luke
recalls, for later Christians, what the first Church proclaimed. He
records for us what those first Christians announced to the world. We
are given the first public testimony to Christ so that it can serve
as a model for our witness to the world. The
lectionary picks this up. In
the season between Easter and Pentecost we read a series of passages
which contains a number of these sermons. Today
we have heard Peter preach again. Throughout
his time with Jesus it was almost always Peter who was first to
speak. He
is somewhere between quick-witted and carelessly impulsive. Sometimes
he found just the right words, to articulate the truth they were
witnessing before anyone else could. Like
the occasion when he was first to identify Jesus as “The Messiah
of God.” (Luke 9:18) But
just as often he finds the wrong thought and speaks that out loud. Like
the occasion, shortly after his confession of Christ, that he
attempts to deny that Jesus must suffer, or the time during Jesus’
trial before the chief priests that he denied ever knowing Jesus.What
up to this point has been a fault as much as a virtue, has now become
Peter’s gift to the Church. Since
the resurrection and especially since Pentecost seven weeks later,
this quickness to speech makes Peter the most prominent public
witness to Jesus’ resurrection. On
this occasion Peter and John have been on their way into the temple
to pray, when they have met a crippled beggar sitting near one of the
gates into the temple. The
man has cried out to them for help. Peter
has replied that he has no money to give the man, but he says:“what
I have I give you in the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth
stand up and walk.”The
man is healed and begins to praise God. This
of course draws a crowd, which gives Peter the opportunity to preach:“You
Israelites, why do you wonder at this, or why do you stare at us, as
though by our own power or piety we had made him walk?”Peter
explains that the lame man has been healed only in the name of Jesus. His
sermon takes the shape which is shared by all of the sermons in the
book of Acts. His
message is that of the first Church, and it remains the essence of
Christian preaching ever since. What
has been called the “primitive kerygma”, the first proclamation, of
the early Church, declared by Peter and recorded by Luke in his book,
remains the model for all subsequent preaching by Christians. Luke
remembers these early sermons, so that they can serve as both a
pattern and as an inspiration for what Christians might always say. The
pattern of these sermons is consistent:“Those
who rejected and killed Jesus were wrong.”“Jesus
is vindicated by God who has raised him from the dead.”“Therefore
you should repent, turn to God.”It
is not quite a three point sermon. But
it is a pretty succinct outline of the thrust of Christian rhetoric. This
is what the Church says. Despite
the world’s rejection of God, God in his resurrection of Jesus
provides the opportunity to be restored to God. If
we were looking for a simple faith, here it is, in the first preaching
of the first Christians.That
said, every context provides opportunity to nuance what is said. On
this occasion, because Peter’s words are prompted by the healing of
the lame man, his sermon can also point to the healing as a further
vindication of Jesus. Peter
is able to point to further evidence in the world as his hearers are
experiencing it of the truth of what he saying. “Not
only has God raised Jesus from the dead, but now this man has been
healed in Jesus’ name.”“Therefore
you should repent, turn to God.”Peter’s
preaching, and Luke’s recollection of it provides a model for what
Christians should say, whether they are preachers or not. But
in preaching context, the particular moment of speech, is everything. Peter
is the model preacher, but what he does and how he speaks is tied to
the occasion of his speaking, so that not everything is easily
reapplied on every occasion of Christian speaking. Peter
is the model preacher, who gives the model Christian testimony, but
not everything he says is repeatable, or even beyond reproach.
The
context is decisive. Peter
speaks the way he does, to the people who are actually in front of
him. This
crowd is not the same crowd that has been in front of any other
Christian who speaks ever since. So
that not everything that Peter says can be accepted and uncritically
adopted by all Christians in every place at all time and in every
situation. Indeed
something of the old Peter, whose speech was risky even reckless, is
still present in the model Christian speaker. Some
of how Peter speaks shows us that from the beginning there have been
some aspects of the way Christians have spoken that we are best
warned against.
Latent
Anti-SemitismThe
crowd which Peter speaks to is the crowd of Jerusalem’s residents
as they are heading into the temple to pray. Potentially
many of those who are listening to Peter now were in
the crowd that gathered some months earlier in Jerusalem, who
rejected Jesus when Pilate offered him back to them. Peter
is probably not unjustified at laying the rejection of Jesus at their
feet. They
are the same crowd.And
they are probably almost all Jewish. So
he can quite reasonably say: “You
Israelites. . .”But
the context here is absolutely decisive. Subsequent
Christians perhaps should not have adopted this manner of speech. It
opens the door to Anti-Semitism. The
tragedy of Christian history is the history of conflict between
Christians and Jews. It
is a conflict which became ever more lethal to Jews as the church
became more powerful. One
of the greatest crimes of the Church in history has been to use the
Jewish Messiah against Jews. Peter’s
messaging is important. He
must draw a distinction between the Church, Christians and everyone
else. But
his approach cannot be uncritically adopted. He
achieves his aim by “othering” a particular group, in this case
Jews. We
still attempt to draw boundaries around ourselves, to mark the church
out as different. But
we do so at the risk of separating ourselves from, and even wounding,
people that God in Jesus Christ wants us to be united with.
Political
ExpedienceSomething
which Peter also does, and which much Christian speech has done
since, is to shift the blame for the death of Jesus away from the
Roman Empire. And
indeed to do it in such a way that further emphasises the possibility
of Jewish culpability, by blaming the temple leadership. Peter
does his best to exonerate the
Roman Procurator,
Pontius Pilate.“.
. . Jesus whom you
handed over and rejected in the presence of Pilate though he decided
to release him.”Christians
have adopted Peter’s model in their attitude to Pilate’s actions. Yet
is this really speaking truth to power, in the manner which Jesus
himself practised? Pilate
may have claimed he found no fault in Jesus. He
may have claimed he wanted to release him. But
he had Jesus executed anyway. He
committed an act which he knew himself to be unjust. Surely
that is worse than just being unjust, being knowingly unjust because
it is more convenient?Peter
of course has good reasons not to want to provoke the Romans. In
the end the Church must live in the world, and create some space for
itself to do its work and make its message heard. It
is no good bring down the power of Empire on the Church when it is
not strong enough to survive. But
Peter has opened the door to making the Church comfortable with the
power of this world, even when that power is clearly unjust. The
Church did adopt Peter’s approach, and as it turns out it was a
rather successful strategy. This
manner of speaking opened the door to allow Roman elites to adopt
Christianity. Pilate
remained an important figure in Christian debates with pagans. Both
sides wanted to exonerate Pilate. The
pagans claimed Pilate was justified in his sentencing of Jesus,
because he was the leader of a violent revolutionary gang. The
Christian apologists adopted Peter’s line, that Pilate had wanted
to release Jesus and
was manipulated into having him killed. They
argued that Christianity was no threat to those political elites. Their
argument succeeded! The
Empire became officially Christian, not because it converted the
majority of it’s people, but because it gained influence with the
ruling elite in Rome. That
strategy has been a triumph and a tragedy. It
has greatly increased the influence of Christianity in the world. But
it has done so by often allying the Church with the powerful and
setting it against the poor and the powerless, with who God sides. This
shows that even our most successful strategies bring with them
profound risks to the message we are actually trying to speak to the
world.
Hypocrisy
by OmissionPeter
is very prompt in the accusation that others had rejected Jesus. He
says:“.
. . you rejected the holy and Righteous One. . .”What
Peter fails to mention is that at the point that rejection was made,
he had already denied that he ever knew Jesus. Peter
is clearly open to an accusation of hypocrisy.Of
course the pulpit is almost never the best place to exercise
self-doubt or self-criticism. To
be convincing the message must be delivered with a high degree of
self confidence. And
every preacher knows, as every Christian who shares the gospel knows,
that we always must speak beyond where we find ourselves. Speaking
on behalf of God in Christ is an unavoidably risky business, we
cannot but make ourselves vulnerable. But
this can’t go with real forgetfulness. We
cannot adopt Peter’s manner of speaking without
remembering, as surely he did, that we fall far short of the glory of
the one we are pointing. One
of the most off-putting characteristics which Christians can
sometimes present is self-righteous hypocrisy.
How
then can we speak at all? What
saves Peter’s and our speech? The
answer lies in the grace of God. There
is an almost unspoken gap in that proclamation which the Church has
made:“Those
who rejected and killed Jesus were wrong.”“Jesus
is vindicated by God who has raised him from the dead.”“Therefore
you should repent, turn to God.”There
is a space of time between, Jesus being raised from the dead and
repentance. It
is that time in which all Christian speaking exists. It
is the time in which we live, the time of God’s patience and
forbearance. The
time in which the opportunity to turn to God arises. Peter
articulates God’s patience:“I
know that you acted in ignorance.”If
Peter knows then certainly God knows. But
Peter also knows that God achieves what God sets out to do.“God
fulfilled what he had foretold. . .”Whilst
we must be careful how we speak in this time in between, we can be
reassured that despite all the flaws in how Peter spoke and in how we
continue to represent the Gospel, God in his patient forbearance
continues to work his purpose out, as much despite us as because of
us.Amen.
Peter Preaches by Christopher Wood-Archer is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Saturday, 10 April 2021
A Sermon for the Second Sunday of Easter (11/04/21): Responding to the Resurrection
Saturday, 3 April 2021
A Sermon for Easter Day (04/04/21): The Empty Tomb
The Empty Tomb
Mark 16:1-8
The Empty Tomb by Christopher Wood-Archer is licensed under CC BY-NC 4.0
Friday, 2 April 2021
A Sermon for Good Friday (02/04/21): Proclamation of the Cross
The Proclamation of the Cross
John 18:16b-30
Executions are outside of our experience. There hasn't been in an execution in this country for over 50 years. And for almost 100 years before that they had been done out of sight. So a public execution is something we can have no real knowledge of. But Jesus' execution is public, very public. It is an execution that includes a long walk through crowded city streets and concludes in a public space where travellers are continually passing by. It is not hard to imagine that an execution like this would both chaotic and horrifying. Yet because the focus of the telling of this execution is Jesus, something else emerges. We're not given any details of the press of the crowd. We are not made aware of the noise, of the stench, of the struggle to even put one foot in front of another. We're not given any details of the violence which the soldiers employed. We are not invited to look at them as they assert themselves against the crowd and against their victim. We're not given any details of the tortuous manner of Jesus execution. We are not shown just what it was that the empire did to those it perceived as a threat or as an opponent. And we are especially not given any details of the agony that crucifixion was intended to inflict on Jesus before he died.
Instead what we see is the quiet dignity of Jesus throughout He remains completely in control of himself. He goes willingly to do what he must do. The rage and violence of the world fade and we see his quiet confidence in the goodness of God's will.
I was trying think how I would picture this.
I imagined a film scene portraying all this. The shot would start out with quite a wide focus, with the soldiers and the crowd visible and lots of noise. As the scene progressess the camera would focus closer and close in on just Jesus' face, and with the sound leve gradually reducing. So that through most of the events we would be focused just on the stillness of Jesus' face, in silence.
What emerges from all of this are the two layers of events which always exist. There is what you might call the mundane layer, the surface layer of events that happen. There is contingency of everything. There is the way one thing leads to another, the “just-the-way-it-is” of things that take place. But beyond that there is another layer. There always is but it is most dramatically so here, beyond that mundane there is what God is doing through these events. Behind the chaos and horror of the world there is God's love and power to save.
Bearing his own cross
The victim carrying his own cross was part of the punishment of crucifixion. The one to be executed had to carry the means of their own death to the place where they would die. It is an aspect of the cruelty which is the Empire’s assertion of power over its victims. That Jesus carries his own cross merely reflects the Roman practice of execution. Except that here Jesus demonstrates, as he always does, that he in total command of the events of this hour. Throughout the events of Thursday night and Friday morning others have attempted to assert their control over what is happening and over Jesus' fate. It begins among Jesus’ followers with Peter striking off the High Priest's servants ear with the sword which Jesus tells him to put away. It continues with the Chief Priests in their trial of Jesus. They find him guilty but are unable and unwilling to kill him themselves. And on to Pilate who is unhappy about being manipulated by the Chief Priests and who wants to find some way out of killing Jesus. Throughout all of those things Jesus has remained resolute. He remains set on the course that he knows he must take. So now carrying the cross it continues. He is not dragged to his end. This is not some unfortunate accident. This is not an unfortunate and unforseen turn of events. He steps out in willing acceptance that this is the way it must be, for God's will to be done.
Pilate also wrote an inscription
Another aspect of the punishment of crucifixion was the “titulus.” It was a board with the formal charge against the victim written on it. Often it was hung round the victims neck as they went to the place of execution. And afterwards it was fixed to the cross so that everyone could see what fault the Empire had found in this person. It was also a reminder of the Empire’s power over any who might oppose them. It declared, “See what happens if you try to do this against us!” Pilate wrote: “Jesus of Nazareth: King of the Jews.” On a legal level that is the charge against Jesus. In the Empire only the Emperor can make a king. That authority is his to give or to take away. Claiming to be a king against the authority of the Emperor is treason. And it is punishable by death, the by traitor’s death, crucifixion. But at the same time what Pilate writes is true. And it in a way he could not understand. Throughout his trial before Jesus the issue had been whether or not Jesus is a king. Jesus acknowledges that he is, but not the kind of king that Pilate knows. Jesus is the king who brings about a different sort of reign. So the sign on the cross becomes also the proclamation of the truth. Jesus is king. If you want to see what God's reign looks like, you have to go to the cross and see.
Not unnaturally the Chief priests are dismayed at this turn of events. Everything they have done, all their manoeuvring, all their machinations, and all their conspiring and manipulation has been to prevent the further public exposure of Jesus and his claim to authority among the people of God. All the world had been going after him and the Chief Priests and their allies didn't like it. And they have tried to put a stop to it. But their plans have completely backfired. Here is Jesus proclaimed as their king. But it is done in a way that humiliates them. They have sold themselves out. They have declared that they knew no king but Caesar, when in truth the only king they should have known is God. they have sold themselves out and gained nothing!
They plead with Pilate to put the more palatable “he claimed to be the king of the Jews” But they are rebuffed. Not because Pilate believed the truth of what he had written, even though ironically it is true. He acts this way because it is a further way to assert his power, and the power of Empire, over the Jewish leadership whom he loathes. The best efforts of the opponents of God, or even of religious people, to prevent the true and living God being made known always end in failure. Since God uses even this death to announce his reign
Many of the Jews read this inscription
The announcement of Jesus' kingship is made in the must public way. Jesus hangs on a cross on a hill by a road just outside the city. Many of the passers by see him lifted up there. The sign which Pilate has written provides translations of the inscription in Aramaic, Latin and Greek. It is written the local vernacular, the language of imperial administration, and the common language of the whole of the Eastern Mediterranean. The proclamation of Jesus kingship is made universally comprehensible. Just as Jesus had predicted, in the dark, on the night Nicodemus had come to speak with him:
“When the Son of Man is lifted up he will draw all people to him.”
What seems like a defeat, what seems like the assertion of worldly power over Jesus, turns out to be his exultation. The crucifixion rather than being the assertion of the world’s power over Jesus turns out to be an ironic coronation and enthronement of Jesus against the world’s power. The cross become the sign to which all God's people are drawn
I thirst
As the end draws near Jesus speaks:
“I thirst”
At that mundane level it is simply a reminder of the pain that accompanies his dying. His thirst is pathological. But in it there is also a reminder of something else that Jesus has said. In the garden, last evening, as Peter tried to prevent Jesus’ arrest, Jesus had said: “Am I not to drink the cup the Father has given me.”
At that other level Jesus' thirst is his desire to do God's will. His thirst symbolises his willingness to embrace his death as fulfilment of his obedience to and loyalty towards God. Jesus thirsts to God's will and the world offers him sour wine. It is a final ironic display of the world's complete misunderstanding. The one hanging on the cross is the one who made good wine at Cana, and more of it than anyone could drink. Yet the world attempts to satisfy the thirst of the One who is himself the source of living water. On the cross the words which Jesus' spoke to the woman at the well forever ring true:
“If you knew who you were speaking to, you would ask me for a drink”
It is finished
At the very end Jesus remains in control. He says:
“It is finished”
Again at the mundane level this looks like a simple statement of fact. His life is at an end. But it is also a declaration of something much deeper and more important. Jesus' death is not a moment of defeat or despair. All the way through Jesus has remained confident and resolute. Now he declares his confidence that God's work is completed in him. God wills only good for those who trust him, despite all appearances to the contrary. It would be easy to dwell on the horror and suffering inflicted on Jesus. Indeed Christians often have. But the horror and the suffering to some extent are just the surface, the way things happen to have happened. More profoundly the crucifixion is the proclamation of Jesus as king
The death of Jesus is the demonstration of his complete confidence in the goodness of God's will toward him. And in that way it has the power to save us.
Amen.
Proclamation of the Cross by Christopher Wood-Archer is licensed under CC BY-NC 4.0