2nd
Sunday after the Epiphany
Texts: John 1:29-42;
1 Corinthians 1:1-9
BEHOLD THE LAMB OF
GOD CHANGING HISTORY
Barely a week ago in the midst of a beautiful, sunny winter day, we
began hearing news from
Arizona of yet another horrifying bloodbath. (1)
If you are like me, for a moment you sat stunned,
trying to take it in. It's hard to do more than shake our heads in
disbelief. In fact, disbelief might
be the best way to describe it. Today is our second Sunday in our
Epiphany series "Heaven on
Earth." Yet didn't we just witness another example of hell on
earth? It's the type of thing that
shakes our belief that anything has gotten better since Jesus came to
earth. It often seems like
things have actually gotten worse, making it easy to lose hope and
question faith.
What a difference from Paul's newness of faith we just read. (2) He's like a love-struck teenager
who can't stop talking about the person they love -- like Tony in West
Side Story, "Maria, I'll
never stop saying Maria!" Paul says Jesus name over and over and over
- eight times in nine
verses! He couldn't stop talking about Jesus, because without
Jesus nothing else made sense. He
wanted the Corinthians to know - more than anything - what it would
mean to have Jesus in the
center of their lives, and in every thought.
Paul also wanted them to see that Jesus was not just the center of
their own lives, but that he was
at the center of the whole world - with a special
place in history. Most of the Christians in
Corinth were not Jews, but were 'pagans' who believed in gods and
goddesses. They didn't have
the same view of their unique place in history the way Jews did - who
knew through the prophets
that history is going somewhere.
Jesus shifted the world. Things were moving in a new direction. Again
and again Paul wants
them to hear they were being swept up into the one true God's - the God
of Israel's - wave of
love and power at work for the whole world. They had witnessed it's
unveiling in Jesus, God's
son. That's why Jesus is at the center of the picture for
Paul.
Have we lost Paul's excitement, especially about Jesus being at the
center of history? Events like
the Arizona shooting make that difficult. But I believe we can still
get excited like St. Paul that
God is changing the world through Jesus to rescue us from our
terrible violence.
In John's Gospel we hear a bold claim of Jesus' place in the world.
When John the Baptist sees
Jesus coming, he declares, "Behold the Lamb of God who takes
away the sin of the world!" John
realizes the amazing power in declaring Jesus as the Lamb.
It's important to remember that up
until this time, in every world religion, people were
sacrificing both animals and humans on
altars. Regardless of the religion, all the gods and goddesses shared
one thing in common: they
were wrathful and demanded blood sacrifice. So for their followers some
acts of violence were
SACRED! For eons, to appease angry gods humans laid their animals -
even their own children
- on altars. These were their 'sacrificial lambs.'
John the Baptist's declaration was powerful - even unthinkable! It was
no longer our lambs
being sacrificed to God; it was the true God changing history, turning
everything upside down
forever. In Jesus Christ it is reversed - God sacrificed his lamb to
us. Through Jesus, God reveals
that we are the wrathful ones lashing out with deadly
consequences. Even though most religions
no longer practice ritualized blood sacrifice, don't humans still
commit blood sacrifice? People
claim to know just exactly who God wants killed, and we are just the
ones to carry it out. We'll
execute that criminal, burn that witch, go to war against god's
enemies. We make it our duty to
exact the punishment against the enemies of our wrathful god.
But in one single declaration John the Baptist says, 'No, God is not
wrathful, God does NOT
command us to kill. Standing here is God's Lamb, sacrificed
to take away our sin of wrathful
violence by enduring it on the cross.' With this, John the Baptist
proclaims a complete and utter
reversal of eons of human history in which humans justify violence
against one another by their
gods. The Lamb of God will endure the world's violence so that the true
God might raise him up
as the promise of true Life. God is love, never wrath (1 John 4). God
is life, never murderous
death. God is light in which there is no darkness at all (1 John 1:5).
So in two thousand years of Christian history how did we get it so
wrong and turn our loving
God back into a wrathful God who wants us to kill? I think it helps to
try and understand human
nature in a new way. (3) From the
beginning of time (100,000 years of homo sapiens!), religions
centered on wrathful gods demanding blood; this became ingrained in all
humans. I believe that's
the 'original sin' that Christian tradition talks about - a sin that
has plagued every culture since
the dawn of time. When we begin to understand the power that culture
has to warp and twist
even the Christian truth, we better understand how it becomes easy to
revert back to that god of
wrath.
In antiracism workshops I've experienced, trainers have referred to how
racism has become
"baked in" or part of our "cultural DNA." Antiracism is
countercultural. And that same "cultural
DNA" of historical racism goes all the back to the beginning, so we
begin to see how Jesus, the
Lamb of God, is countercultural. Nonviolence is countercultural. As we
begin to recognize how
deeply some things are ingrained, we can begin to see how easily it can
be to revert to cultural
norms.
So when did Christians begin to revert to those old religious and
cultural norms of a God who
demands violence? We can't say for sure, but there was a pivotal time
in history when the god of
wrath again takes center stage in the Christian church. It's when St.
Anselm articulated the
doctrine of atonement at the time -- and I don't think it was a
coincidence -- that the Western
Church was launching its First Crusade against the Muslims in the Holy
Land. Christians needed
God to revert to being a wrathful god of violence to justify the
Crusades, so St. Anselm re-interpreted the Christian story. He
explained that our wrathful God rightly punishes us all for our
sins with death; but because God is gracious as well as wrathful, God
lovingly sent Jesus as a
sacrifice to satisfy god's own wrath. Jesus stepped in to take the
punishment so we could have
NEW life after death.
This "doctrine of atonement," still popular today, lays waste to John
the Baptist's simple
declaration that Jesus as God's lamb came to reverse everything.
According to this popular
doctrine, Jesus reversed nothing, but was merely sent to be another
sacrifice to the same age-old
wrathful God. Nothing changes. And Christians who follow this doctrine
follow in the same
footsteps of darkness as all other peoples.
But there are new winds of truth blowing through the church once again,
questioning the doctrine
of atonement down to its foundations. We're beginning to see Christians
once again proclaim the
true God who is love and never wrath, life and never murderous death,
light and never darkness.
God's Spirit is blowing in fresh ways that give me hope, even in the
face of terrible tragedies. On
this weekend of celebrating Martin Luther King, Jr.'s life, we can also
celebrate as Christians the
wind of the Spirit beginning to blow new practices of Jesus's disciples
-- practices of standing
up against the evils of human violence like racism, but armed only with
the weapon of God's
powerful love, armed only with the call to suffer the violence and
never return it.
We are invited to celebrate this season of Epiphany as we continue to
explore these renewed
practices of our faith, as we follow Jesus' command in the Sermon on
the Mount to, "Let your
light so shine before others that they may see your good works and
glorify your Father in
heaven." Amen
Paul J. Nuechterlein
Delivered at Prince of Peace Lutheran,
Portage, MI, January 16, 2011
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
This sermon, and its premise that Jesus as the Lamb of God changes
history, may raise as many
questions for you as it answers. So the following tries to anticipate
some of those questions.
If the change is about not justifying human violence by calling on a
wrathful god (turning
it into sacred, divine-commanded violence), then what has changed in
two thousand years
of history? Shouldn't the change brought about by the Lamb of God be
more dramatic?
This is the first big pay-off of switching to an anthropological
context. "Recorded history" is only
three to four thousand years. Anthropology is set within a context of
"evolutionary history,"
which is 100,000 years for homo sapiens, and several millions
of years for our extinct hominid
ancestors (Neanderthal, homo erectus, etc.). That puts a
different spin on what we mean by
"dramatic" change.
For example, if we consider René Girard's premise that ritual
blood sacrifice is central to the
evolution of homo sapiens, then the complete cessation of
ritual sacrifice right from the outset of
Christianity (replaced by Holy Communion) is a very dramatic change
indeed. Stopping a deeply
ingrained human practice that's more than 100,000 years old is quite a
turn-around! It's a
revolutionary change. But other aspects of the needed change -- like
doing away with the
wrathful gods of sacrifice, once and for all -- are going at an
evolutionary pace, happening over
centuries and millennia, not overnight. Two thousand years is a blink
of an eye in evolutionary
time.
OK, so the change is slower (evolutionary) with our experience of God.
We keep
'importing' the deeply ingrained human experience of God as wrathful
and punishing back
into Jesus' experience of God as love. But what's the evidence that
Jesus at least
understood? Isn't the New Testament full of talk about judgment?
This is where we have to go back and read with new eyes. Yes, there are
words of judgment, but
they are words of self-judgment -- in other words, that we
humans will suffer the consequences
for our actions. Jesus leaves God out of it. The crucial example is
Mark 13 (and the parallels in
Luke 21 and Matthew 24), where Jesus prophesies the destruction of the
Temple in Jerusalem.
Read it carefully. Jesus never says God will destroy it. He
knows it will be someone like the
Romans. Jesus is prophesying that if his people insist on thinking
their wrathful God wants them
to wage a military campaign against the Romans, there will be 'natural'
consequences. In the
tradition of the prophets he uses language of nature, too, like the
moon turning to blood. But this
is like you or I saying, "Hitler covered the earth in blood." Or, "It
was an earth shattering
experience." We don't mean it literally. We mean that our world was
seriously rocked. Yet when
we have our wrathful-god-spectacles on, we hear Jesus and the prophets
saying that God is going
to bring judgment and the end of the world. Read the words again. He
doesn't say that.
This is a good spot for bringing in a very important passage which
makes it clear that, even if we
are hearing and understanding at an evolutionary pace, God has worked a
revolutionary change in
the cross and resurrection of Jesus the Messiah. Easter morning the
world begins again with
God's loving power of life made visible in the Risen Christ so that it
begins to shed light on
everything, past, present, and future. The Resurrected Jesus is walking
with two disciples on
Easter evening. They are despondent, so much so that they still can't
wrap their heads around
reports that Jesus is Risen. That doesn't make sense to them. Why would
God raise someone who
had suffered such a humiliating defeat at the hands of their enemies?
Then Jesus said to them, "Oh, how
foolish you are, and how slow of heart to believe all
that the prophets have declared! Was it not necessary that the Messiah
should suffer these
things and then enter into his glory?" Then beginning with Moses and
all the prophets, he
interpreted to them the things about himself in all the scriptures.
(Luke 24:25-27)
And a short time later he repeats this message with the eleven
disciples:
Then Jesus said to them, "These are my
words that I spoke to you while I was still with
you - that everything written about me in the law of Moses, the
prophets, and the psalms
must be fulfilled." Then he opened their minds to understand the
scriptures, and he said to
them, "Thus it is written, that the Messiah is to suffer and to rise
from the dead on the
third day, and that repentance and forgiveness of sins is to be
proclaimed in his name to
all nations, beginning from Jerusalem." (Luke 24:44-47)
We have to undergo a process of rereading Scriptures with a wholly
different God in mind, a God
who lovingly suffers our violence rather than dish any out, a God who
forgives rather than seek
revenge (or "punishment").
It takes learning to reread all of scriptures, but let me give two
other examples of specific
passages which seem clear to me. The first example is the first five
recorded sermons, all given
by Peter and recorded in Acts. They have widely diverse circumstances
and address different
issues. But all of them also relay the core message:
"...this
man ... you crucified and killed.... But God raised him
up...." (Acts 2:23-24)
"...and you
killed the Author of life, whom God raised from the dead."
(Acts 3:15)
"...by
the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, whom you crucified,
whom God raised from the
dead. This Jesus is 'the stone that was rejected by you, the
builders; it has become the
cornerstone.'" (Acts 4:10-11)
"The God
of our ancestors raised up Jesus, whom you had killed by
hanging him on a tree."
(Acts 5:30)
They
put him to death by hanging him on a tree; but God raised him...."
(Acts 10:39-40)
This is the crucial insight of the cross and resurrection which is
changing history. Human beings
began for many millennia with the notion of gods that command us to do
violence, so that the
responsibility for much of our violence lies with the gods. We dish out
just the right dose of
violence so that we can live in peace. But the Lamb of God means to
reverse this so that we can
finally see that the responsibility for our violence has been ours all
along. God the Creator, the
giver of life in the first place, has always and only been about life. (4) We kill. God raises to life.
The second example that has been crucial for me has even recently been
enhanced by the brilliant
work of New Testament scholar Douglas Campbell, in his monumental book The
Deliverance of
God. (5) Once again, St. Paul's
magisterial Letter to the Romans holds the key to what is shaping up
to be a time of great change, (6) a new
Emergence within the Church of Christ. Paul gives us
exactly what we are claiming for the Lamb of God: an explicit putting
away of the god of wrath,
once and for all.
What would have been clear to Paul's original audience, however, has
been problematic for
many generations of Christians, until Campbell came along and unraveled
a knot in the
interpretation. After an introduction, Paul opens the body of
his letter with these important
words, "For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all
ungodliness and wickedness of
those who by their wickedness suppress the truth" (Romans 1:18). To us
it seems clear that,
'Here's Paul spouting the age-old stuff about a wrathful god.' But
Campbell has shown that it's
actually the beginning of the opposite, Paul beginning to argue against
the wrathful god. What
we don't know, which the original audience did know, is that in Rom.
1:18 Paul is voicing the
view of an opposing Teacher whose position he will begin knocking down
in Rom. 2:1. What is
lost to us is that Paul wrote all his letters to be read out-loud, so
Paul didn't have to write in the
text that 1:18 is now the voice of his opponent. He simply had to train
the person who would
perform it to literally use a different voice. (Have you ever taken on
the voice of a TV evangelist,
"Believe and be saved by JEEE-sus!"?)
You might immediately object, "How can we know that?!" We can't, for
certain. But Campbell
builds a masterful argument over hundreds of pages that we can't
duplicate here. Let me simply
quote Campbell on this crucial matter of a 'sea-change' in how we
experience God through Jesus
Christ:
In short, Paul seems to be stating in v. 18 -- in a suitably pompous
manner -- that the
initial and hence essential content of the Teacher's position is a
vision of the future wrath
of God -- of God as retributively just. And Paul does not think that
this is the essential
nature of the God of Jesus Christ. So he contrasts the Teacher's
programmatic theological
claim quite deliberately with the initial disclosure of his own
position -- his gospel --
which speaks of the saving intervention of God and hence of the
divine compassion (vv.
16-17). Paul is stating here compactly that fundamentally
different conceptions of God
are at stake in these two gospels. (7)
Thanks to Campbell's thesis that Rom. 1:18-32 carries the voice of an
opposing Teacher, it is
even easier to see the significance of something I've noticed for years
(with the help of Robert
Hamerton-Kelly and James Alison (8))
before encountering Campbell. Paul, after using the phrase
"wrath of God" in 1:18, uses the word "wrath" by itself thereafter
(in eleven subsequent uses).
He stops pairing it with "of God." When he begins to argue against the
teacher in Rom. 2, for
example, he says, "But by your hard and impenitent heart you are
storing up wrath for yourself
on the day of wrath, when God's righteous judgment will be revealed"
(Rom. 2:5). Paul is
crystal-clear that we human beings are the ones who have a problem with
wrath. The "day of
wrath" will simply be a day when the wrath we have stored up for
ourselves comes to roost.
What about "God's righteous judgment"? Will God pile on with God's
wrath? No! Paul's entire
argument in Romans is about the God of unconditional grace that we meet
in Jesus Christ. On
the countless terrible days that our wrath comes to roost (June 6,
1944, and Aug. 6, 1945, to
name but two), we can at least thank God for the grace we receive in
Jesus. In short, the Letter to
the Romans is all about "God's righteous judgment" revealed precisely
as loving mercy, not
wrath.
One important note before we move on. If you happen to check my facts
on this "wrath"-in-Romans business, and check your NRSV concordance,
you will find in your NRSV Bibles the
words "wrath of God" in Rom. 5:9 and 12:19. Here's the thing: the word
"God" does not appear
paired with "wrath" in Paul's original Greek text. The translators put
it in! Presumably, because
we human beings are usually wearing our wrathful-god-spectacles. So
even when it's not there in
Paul's text we see wrath connected to God because we're conditioned to
do so. My point is that
it's time to replace wrathful-God-spectacles with the
loving-God-spectacles that we receive from
Jesus Christ. Then, we can begin the lengthy task of rereading the
whole Bible.
When we do reread the whole Bible, won't we find loads of stuff about a
wrathful God in
the Old Testament?
Yes, but that's why Jesus comes to finally give us
loving-God-spectacles: so that we can learn to
'interpret in all the scriptures the things about Jesus' (Luke 24:27).
We can see, for example, the
increasing use of the formula: "Return to the LORD, your God, for he is
gracious and merciful,
slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love, and relents from
punishing" (Joel 2:13).
The whole point of prophecy in the Hebrew Scriptures is to move the
audience to repentance, to
choose a different path in life. Think about Dickens' A Christmas
Carol. The visit of the three
ghosts is not to predict punishment for Scrooge. Their purpose is to
show him the current
trajectory of his life. He is on a path to nowhere but meaningless
death. Their visits are an act of
mercy that he might choose a different path toward a meaningful life in
loving community with
others. Remember from earlier Jesus' prophecy of the destruction of the
Temple in Jerusalem. It
is not about a punishing God. It is about the trajectory of their lives
if they continue to choose the
military option of standing against enemies. The difference with the
Hebrew prophets is that they
still see this whole merciful enterprise as directly God's work. So
they call natural consequences
"punishment."
But there's lots more gruesome stuff than prophetic warnings!
Yes, there is also simply the terrible, wrathful God present. We can't
get around passages like
Deut. 7:1-2, in which God basically commands genocide under Joshua's
leadership:
When the LORD your God brings you into
the land that you are about to enter and
occupy, and he clears away many nations before you-- the Hittites, the
Girgashites, the
Amorites, the Canaanites, the Perizzites, the Hivites, and the
Jebusites, seven nations
mightier and more numerous than you-- 2 and when the LORD
your God gives them over
to you and you defeat them, then you must utterly destroy them. Make no
covenant with
them and show them no mercy.
But Jesus can get around it by giving us another parallel version. In
Matthew 15, we see Jesus
encounter a "Canaanite" woman. Matthew is borrowing from Mark's story
here, but he has
changed Mark's ethnically correct description of the "Syro-Phoenician"
woman to the
anachronistic "Canaanite" woman (akin to our calling a modern day
"Norwegian" person a
"Viking"). Matthew in chapter 15 is narrating for us the mission of
God's new Joshua ("Joshua"
and "Jesus" point to the same name in Hebrew) going into the same land
but being all about
revealing God's mercy, rather than a God of "no mercy." This is an
example of being able to
reread the Hebrew scriptures from the perspective of Jesus.
Moreover, at this point in our conversation we should also be at the
point of being able to
appreciate how difficult it is for human beings to take off the
wrathful-gods-spectacles. If we've
noticed thus far how hard it is for Christians even after
Christ came -- how often have Christians
claimed the same wrathful God in slaughtering our enemies?! -- we
should be able to appreciate
the difficulty of doing so before Christ came. There is the
anthropological pressure of 100,000
years working against us. So, yes, the Hebrew Scriptures are less
perfect in their revealing a God
of mercy. They are, in some sense, an anticipation of the perfect
revelation in the Word made
flesh, Jesus Christ.
But they are also much more than an anticipation. First of all, the
voice of the victim begins to
come through in amazing ways, through Job, the Psalmist, and especially
the Suffering Servant
Songs of Second Isaiah (Isaiah 53 being the prime example). Even in the
Bible's first book, we
see things like Abel's blood crying out from the ground to God against
his murderer. (Contrast
this to the Roman myth of Romulus and Remus in which Romulus is judged
to be right in killing
his brother for trespassing -- the mythological justification for
Rome's killing the trespassers
upon its imperial boundaries.) Finally, the story of Joseph and his
brothers is almost a perfect
precursor to the Gospel. Joseph is the lamb slaughtered to his
brothers' jealousy, as they sell him
into slavery and tell Jacob he's dead. But by many twists in fortune
Joseph becomes the Secretary
of Agriculture to Pharaoh in Egypt, where his brothers come cowering
before him, begging for
food during a famine but expecting revenge.
But Joseph said to them, "Do not be
afraid! Am I in the place of God? Even though you
intended to do harm to me, God intended it for good, in order to
preserve a numerous
people, as he is doing today." (Gen. 50:19-20)
On the cross of Jesus Christ, even though we intended to do harm to
him, God intended it for
good. There are many moments in the Hebrew Scriptures where we glimpse
the true God of
mercy whom Jesus finally helps us to see for good.
Most importantly, it is absolutely crucial to see how the Hebrew
Scriptures provide the
foundation for the revelation which otherwise could not happen. That
foundation is the covenant
to Abraham and Sarah, a covenant of love between the true God and
a Chosen People.
Think of it this way. If we accept the evolutionary history of human
creatures growing into false
religions based on wrathful gods for hundreds of thousands of years,
then how could the true
God, if there is a true God, ever begin to reverse that entrenchment
and get through to us?
Wouldn't it at least take a relationship with someone over a very, very
long time? I think that's
essentially what we have recorded in the Bible. It's the family history
of the true God choosing to
begin somewhere with someone, patiently and lovingly having a
conversation over centuries in
order to finally be seen and heard for who God truly is, the power of
Love who creates all Life.
Endnotes
1. Referring to the January 8, 2011
shooting by Jared Loughner in Tucson, Arizona, that killed six people,
including
Chief U.S. District Court Judge John Roll, and leaving 14 others
injured, including his primary target U.S.
Representative Gabrielle Giffords.
2. I owe the following image and point
about 1 Corinthians 1 to Tom Wright in his book Paul for Everyone:
1
Corinthians (Westminster/John Knox Press, 2004).
3. Based on the work of René
Girard, further referenced in the FAQ section below.
4. This is why the early apostles so
quickly placed Christ right back to the beginning with God at Creation:
John 1:1-5, Col. 1:15-20, et al.
5. Douglas Campbell, The
Deliverance of God: An Apocalyptic Rereading of Justification in Paul.
Grand Rapids,
MI: Eerdmans, 2009.
6. Ibid. Campbell's book helps to make
this clear by giving us a rereading of Romans that shows how the last
great
time of change was off track with its theme of Justification which, for
the most part, has yielded a conditional
message of grace - in other words, no grace at all. Campbell points the
way to reading Romans as a message against
exactly that kind of conditional grace to instead tell the story of
God's unconditional rescue mission in Jesus Christ
from the clutches of sin and death
7. Ibid., p. 543.
8. The basic insight for this reading of
"wrath" in Romans comes from two 'Girardian' friends, Robert
Hamerton-Kelly, Sacred Violence, pp. 101-103, and James
Alison, The Joy of Being Wrong, pp. 126-128.