Romans 15:4-13 * Luke 21:25-33
Taking
a cue from the opening of today’s Epistle, and the last line from
today’s Gospel, and of course the Collect, this Sunday has come to be
called Bible Sunday. The
Collect speaks of two things, one being the obligation of each one of
us concerning the Holy Scriptures to “hear them, read, mark, learn, and
inwardly digest them;” the other being the work of the Holy Spirit as
he uses those scriptures to grow within us patience and comfort that
keeps us along the path to eternal life in Jesus Christ our Lord. And,
if we think about the Epistle and Gospel for this day, we find that
hope to be what our Prayer Book calls “the sure and certain hope of the
resurrection unto eternal life.”
Recently, someone questioned me on why we refer to hope
of the resurrection; after all, we hope for things that may never
happen. I must disagree; we may wish for things that will never happen;
but, hope cannot exist in such wishes. Or we may hope for things that might
happen, but might not. But, to emphasize the meaning of hope as it
relates to faith, we clarify our meaning with the words “sure and
certain.” This comes from the Epistle to the Hebrews:
Wherein
God, willing more abundantly to shew unto the heirs of promise the
immutability of his counsel, confirmed it by an oath: That by two
immutable things, in which it was impossible for God to lie, we might
have a strong consolation, who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the
hope set before us: Which hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both
sure and steadfast, and which entereth into that within the veil.
(Hebrews 6: 17-19)
(Hebrews 6: 17-19)
It
is clear that St. Paul never separated hope from faith, and never
separated these from charity. These virtues grow together, and hope
depends on faith. Hope believes, and love works; faith hopes and charity
labors. What feeds us in our sure and certain hope is the word of God.
Faith grows within us when we hear that particular voice, the voice of
God that we discern so clearly as he speaks to us now within the Scriptures. They cannot become irrelevant. Written so long ago, when
they are spoken or read God himself speaks in the present. Never are
they worn out.
People
have asked about the Holy Scriptures, when were they put together? One
very unfortunate mark of our times is the quickness with which
misinformation becomes “common knowledge.” Over the last few years some
con artists have discovered that one way to make a lot of money in a
hurry is to write a sensational, wholly misleading but shocking thesis
about the Bible or Christian Faith in general, and then sell it directly
to the public. The more revolutionary it is, the better. The more
shocking, the more blasphemous, above all the more sensational, the
easier it is to draw attention to it, and get it promoted on TV. We have
seen these sensational works, all claiming to be a challenge to the
Christian Faith, each make its rise and fall before burning out
entirely. One very important point about that whole new industry is that
none of these authors presents the shocking alleged discovery in the
truly scientific arena of the academic world. If they did, they could
not make the same amount of money overnight- or ever. If these shocking
“discoveries” were put through the genuine process of scientific
analysis they would die a quick death and be forgotten, and no one would
get to make a killing.
As
a result of the sensational, irresponsible and unprofessional,
thoroughly unscientific misinformation that has been thrown in the face
of the public for the last few years, several people think that the
bishops of the Church assembled in Nicea and began cutting books out of
the Bible. Most of the people who believe this also think the Emperor
Constantine was running the Council of Nicea in 325.
A
few facts help to clean up this utter fiction. Even though he was the
Emperor, and even though the Christians of that time knew that the
Edict of Milan in 313 AD had ended two and a half centuries of
persecution (a virtual Holocaust that had made the earliest times of
the Church a bloodbath), and even though they knew that he had the
authority to return to the older laws that had made Christianity an
offense punishable by death and revive them, he was not given the power
to run the Council of Nicea. When the Council met and the Emperor
presumed to address the bishops of the Church, they told him that he
was not allowed to address the assembled bishops of Christ’s Church. Basically,
they told Caesar, the Emperor Constantine to whom they owed so much, to
sit down and be quiet while they discussed the issues among themselves.
Now,
about the Bible, the bishops at the Council of Nicea did not go about
deciding which books were scripture, and which were not. All they did
was to affirm in unity of mind that the books already perceived to be
the Word of God were, indeed, just that. The Old Testament was not the
issue at all, because it was declared to be the Word of God by no less a
Person than the Living Word of God. These books had been received by
the Jewish people for centuries, and were passed on to the Church with
sure and certain authority. The process of recognizing these books was,
by all accounts, the vox populi of the Jews. The Jewish people
knew in what books to find that distinctive voice of God, and so it was
that when Jesus Christ walked the earth and referred to the scriptures,
in every synagogue of the Jews were those specific scrolls that formed
the common library for all of them. We see in Luke that he read from
the scroll of the prophets, reading from Isaiah and saying that
scriptures spoke of none other but himself, Messiah and hope of the
world.
In
the earliest days of the Church this Old Testament formed the only
Canon of scripture. But, by the early years of the second century we
find that twenty-seven additional books were already received and quoted
as the word of God; these twenty seven books forming an additional
canon of scripture. These books are the New Testament. In some places a
few questions were raised about II Peter, Jude and Revelation. But,
over time skepticism about them disappeared. In a few places some
people thought that The Shepherd of Hermas might be part of the
Canon of the scriptures of the Church. But, long before the Council of
Nicea in 325, the Church had defined its Canon as the books we have
now, adding to the Jewish scriptures it had inherited only the
twenty-seven books we call the New Testament. Again, as it had been
among Israel, when the scriptures were received and recognized vox populi,
so it was with the Church of Christ and the canon of the New
Testament. There were no books for the bishops to delete, but rather a
Canon already established.
Now, why was The Shepherd of Hermas not among the books of this Canon? Again, by that same vox populi
that, by the principle of whether or not the people of God recognized
the voice of God, this book had not been under serious consideration.
Simply put, our fathers among the Jews and the early Christians simply
did not hear the clear and
familiar voice of God in any other books as they heard it in the Scriptures. They knew the voice of God in the Law, the Prophets, the
Wisdom Literature and the Psalms. And, they knew that same voice of God
in the four Gospels, the Epistles and the prophecy of St. John the
Revelator. They did not hear it as the voice of God in other books (not
that most of them were ever aware of the many Gnostic writings given so
much undue attention by today’s money making sensation mongers).
St. Paul tells us about the high regard we must give to the Old Testament in today’s Epistle:
“Whatsoever things were written afore time were written for our learning, that we through patience and comfort of the scriptures might have hope.” Think of that history of Israel, from the calling of Abraham to the coming of Jesus Christ who died for our sins and rose again, the history of one people who were never allowed to give themselves over to sin and so be lost among the many pagan nations that served false gods. A people constantly purified by the prophet’s words, and many times by purging and suffering, given to captivity in Babylon but returned to their home after seventy years never to fall again into the worship of idols.
“Whatsoever things were written afore time were written for our learning, that we through patience and comfort of the scriptures might have hope.” Think of that history of Israel, from the calling of Abraham to the coming of Jesus Christ who died for our sins and rose again, the history of one people who were never allowed to give themselves over to sin and so be lost among the many pagan nations that served false gods. A people constantly purified by the prophet’s words, and many times by purging and suffering, given to captivity in Babylon but returned to their home after seventy years never to fall again into the worship of idols.
They
were a people so purified that among them was found one young virgin
who echoed the faith and obedience of Abraham, and more perfectly than
the ancient patriarch himself. Written "afore time" was not only this
history of the people through whom the Word, Jesus our Lord, would be
incarnate, but the predictions made by the prophets of His life, His
death on the cross, and His rising again. We all need to read Isaiah
about the Suffering Servant by whose stripes we are healed, and who
prolonged His days after dying, that He would live forever as the agent
of the Lord’s will. We read of His suffering through the words of King
David who foresaw the agonies of the Lord’s crucifixion, able to
predict them in the first person as though suffering with Him. We read
also, in the words of this prophet king, of the joy of the resurrection
of our Lord Whose death was so brief a thing that He never saw
corruption.
The
Gospel today also gives us this hope, for the Lord Himself assures us
that His coming again will be our redemption, and that the fears and
darkness of this age will disappear in the light of His glory. We are
told to lift up our heads, not to look down and hang our heads. His
coming to rule over heaven and earth, cleansing this world from all
evil, from death and suffering, and all such things that will be no
more, is sure and certain. And, if instead of comfort this fills your
heart with fear, then consider that fear with genuine care. It means
that you must cast off the works of darkness and out on the armor of
light, repent from all your sins and turn to the Lord that you may enter
that blessed state of sure and certain hope, and be strengthened by
the Holy Spirit.
Does
the voice of God fill you with hope or with dread? I hope it does one
or the other. For, anyone to be indifferent to these words is the only
real danger. As our Lord said in His parable of Lazarus and the rich
man, “If they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded,
though one rose from the dead.”1 Our Lord told the Church of the
Laodiceans, “I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I
would thou wert cold or hot. So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth.”2 Indifference
to the word of God is a danger beyond any other, closing the ears that
they cannot hear. But, even if the word brings dread, this too leads
to comfort and hope since the Holy Spirit uses what you hear to bring
you to repentance, true repentance from the heart, and to faith in
Jesus Christ. May God grant ears to hear, eyes to see and a heart to
understand, that each one who is lost may turn and be healed. 3
The
Epistle today speaks of Christ’s ministry first to His own people of
Israel, and His ministry through those people of Israel that believed in Him and became His disciples as it extends to all nations.
“Now
I say that Jesus Christ was a minister of the circumcision for the
truth of God, to confirm the promises made unto the fathers: and that
the Gentiles might glorify God for his mercy; as it is written, For this
cause I will confess to thee among the Gentiles, and sing unto thy
name. And again he saith, Rejoice, ye Gentiles, with his people. And
again, Praise the Lord, all ye Gentiles; and laud him, all ye people.
And again, Isaiah saith, There shall be a root of Jesse, and he that
shall rise to reign over the Gentiles; In him shall the Gentiles trust.”
This
brings to mind the words of Simeon, that he spoke when he held Jesus
as an infant: “A light to lighten the Gentiles, and the glory of thy
people Israel.” 4 This light and
this glory has been known to the world because it is the purpose of God
to shine the light of Christ into every dark place. Into the darkness
of pagan dread and superstition, into the darkness of ignorance and
foolishness, into the darkest places of sin and death. This glorious
light of Christ shines into the darkest places where we try to hide from
God due to our own sins; and if we respond to His mercy that same
light of revelation brings comfort and hope, the sure and certain hope
of the resurrection unto eternal life. The invitation is extended by His word: come, eat and be filled with the food and drink of eternal
life. Come feed on the Living Bread that has come down from heaven, and
with hearty repentance and true faith receive Christ through these
humble means unto everlasting life with Him in glory.
“Now
the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, that ye
may abound in hope, through the power of the Holy Ghost.”
2. Revelation 3:15, 16
3. From Isaiah 6:9
Long ago, in a world that no longer seems to exist, a friend of mine who is now a nun called this "Bibliolatry Sunday," mocking those who seemed to worship Holy Scripture rather than the God to which they pointed. To her, as to me, it seemed unnecessary to have a 'Bible Sunday' when the merest following of the prayer book rule would give you two healthy portions of the psalms a day as well as a minimum of four lessons from Holy Scripture - now counting the epistle and gospel on the days on which and for which the prayer book provided propers. But it would seem there are a few things in the old calendar and lectionary which Cranmer failed to appreciate (probably, I would expect from economic reasons)with the Ember Days and Advent being chief among them. Consequently it delights me when you point out so well the true reason and teaching of this neglected season, my favorite in all the Christian year which, while placed at its beginning points to the glorious end when He shall come again.
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