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Friday, March 27, 2015
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
Friday, March 20, 2015
The Fifth Sunday in Lent, Passion Sunday
“Verily,
verily, I say unto you, Before Abraham was, I AM.”
For
once the enemies of our Lord were right about something, frankly, about
something that many nominal Christians are wrong about. His enemies understood
exactly what he meant by his words, “Before Abraham was, I AM.” And, we call
this day Passion Sunday because we see the reason, ultimately, that his
enemies wanted him dead, and the reason they were unrelenting in pursuit of his
execution. They understood him rightly, and because they reacted in the only
logical way they could, they picked up stones in order to kill him.
In one of his most famous passages in
all his works, C.S. Lewis addressed this very thing that today’s Gospel is
about, in Mere Christianity:
"I am trying
here to prevent anyone saying the really foolish thing that people often say
about Him: 'I'm ready to accept Jesus as a great moral teacher, but I
don't accept his claim to be God.' That is the one thing we must not say.
A man who was merely a man and said the sort of things Jesus said would not be
a good moral teacher. He would either be a lunatic-on a level with the man who
says he is a poached egg-or else he would be the Devil of Hell. You must make
your choice. Either this man was, and is, the Son of God: or else a madman or
something worse. You can shut Him up for a fool, you can spit at Him and kill
Him as a demon; or you can fall at His feet and call Him Lord and God. But let
us not come with any patronising nonsense about His being a great moral
teacher. He has not left that open to us. He did not intend to." 1
Recall the words from the Gospel two
weeks ago: “He that is not with me is against me: and he that gathereth not
with me scattereth.” He called his followers to be ready to die rather than to
deny him before men. There was nothing
innocuous about the commitment he called for, because that commitment was
personal.
Some
men have called people to die for ideas and ideals, causes both good and bad.
These causes were always bigger than any individual, whether leaders and
thinkers were advocating something harmful, or something truly heroic and
principled. But, Jesus called people to die as martyrs out of personal
commitment to Him, faithfulness to Him as an individual. He allowed people to
worship Him, even Jews who knew that there is only one God, and who were
forbidden to worship any other god in the presence, that covers all of heaven
and earth, of the One True God. What kind of man would assume the place of God,
and use that sacred Name, I AM, as his own? What kind of man would claim
the right to such loyalty as leads his followers to persecution and death? What
kind of man, if he has any compassion in him, would knowingly demand total commitment,
even unto death?
A
word I use sparingly is the word “loyalty.” That is because loyalty is not
always virtuous. I remember a young man saying to me, many years ago, that
Albert Speer had been loyal to Hitler. He said this in the context of having
just heard, in a rather pathetic sermon by somebody, that loyalty is a virtue,
and that it always pleases God. So, the young man was praising Speer for his
loyalty to something very close to evil incarnate. Loyalty can be pleasing to God,
or it can be a sin. Loyalty to Hitler, or to any evil cause, man or movement,
is not virtuous, but abominable. That kind of loyalty is the worship of a false
god. It is one way, in any age of history, to bear the mark of the Beast, to
make a radical decision against Jesus Christ.
But,
Jesus dares to call his followers to complete loyalty to Himself, even
to the point of dying rather than to deny Him. What kind of a man is He then?
C.S. Lewis was right: He is either God or He is mad or worse. Jesus deserved at
that moment to be stoned for blasphemy, unless He truly is the Messiah, the Son
of the Living God, the Word made Flesh. Yes, His enemies understood Him. He did, in fact, declare Himself equal to
God. Either He is the One who gave the Law to Moses, or, by that Law, he must
die.
It
would have been bad enough, by their standard, to say only the opening of
today’s Gospel. “Which of you convinceth me of sin?” That is, which of you
accuses or convicts me of sin? The same chapter begins with the story about the
woman taken in adultery, brought to Jesus by enemies who wanted to trap him
into either of two snares: denying the commandments in the Torah (though the
commandment was to execute both the man and the woman who commit adultery-
which presents quite a mystery in that story), or defying the Romans who
allowed no one to execute anybody in their empire except through Roman
law. We all remember what Jesus said:
“He that is without sin among you, let him first cast a stone at her.” All of
these men, enemies of Jesus, had at least the honesty to drop their stones and
leave. Were they men of greater
integrity than Jesus, who now turns around and says, in effect, “I am without
sin- who can accuse me of anything?”
Either
He gave the Law to Moses, or He had broken it, and deserved to die. Listen to
the writer to the Hebrews in today’s Epistle: “For if the blood of bulls and of
goats, and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean, sanctifieth to the
purifying of the flesh: how much more shall the blood of Christ, who through
the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God, purge your conscience
from dead works to serve the living God?” Jesus, alone out of all mankind,
could go to the cross and there make “by his one oblation of himself once
offered, a full, perfect, and sufficient sacrifice, oblation, and satisfaction,
for the sins of the whole world.” While having his vision on the isle of
Patmos, the Apostle John wept because no one in all heaven and earth was worthy
to open the book and break its seven seals, that is until the man came forth
who was both Lion of the tribe of Judah, and also the Lamb of God who takes
away the sins of the world, indeed a lion who appeared as a lamb that had been
slain. He was worthy, and He alone of all mankind.
The writer to the Hebrews uses the
temple, and its typology regarding the New Covenant that Christ would establish
in His own blood, foretold by the prophet Jeremiah. The High Priest once a
year, on Yom Kippor, brought the blood of the sin offering into the Holy
of Holies, and sprinkled it on the mercy seat. That was the type. The priest
who offered any sacrifice had to be a perfect physical specimen of a man,
having no deformity or loss of limb or any member. The animal sacrificed for
sin had to be a perfect specimen, without even spot or blemish. This is because
both the priest and the animal to be offered had to be pictures of Jesus
Christ, and their physical perfection had to be a picture of his spiritual
perfection as the only human free from all stain of sin.
Our Gospel text is just right for
leading us into Passiontide. In declaring His own sinlessness, Christ
reveals that every priest and every sacrifice were only types and shadows of
the Real priest and sacrifice, Himself, the only man worthy to take the book
and open the seals thereof. Declaring His own freedom from sin and death, as
contrasted to all the rest of us, sets the stage for the sorrows of the cross
that were to follow. “They that trust in their wealth, and boast themselves in
the multitude of their riches; None of them can by any means redeem his
brother, nor give to God a ransom for him: For the redemption of their soul is
precious, and it ceaseth for ever,” 2 says the Psalmist. Isaiah adds this: “But
he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities: the
chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed. All
we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and
the LORD hath laid on him the iniquity of us all… he made his grave with the
wicked, and with the rich in his death; because he had done no violence,
neither was any deceit in his mouth. Yet it pleased the LORD to bruise him; he
hath put him to grief: when thou shalt make his soul an offering for sin, he shall
see his seed, he shall prolong his days, and the pleasure of the LORD shall
prosper in his hand.” 3
Declaring oneself free from sin would
be madness and delusion for you and me, but for Jesus it was another step
closer to the cross. On that cross he would establish the New Covenant in his
blood, the Covenant that alone frees us from sin and death, and that stretched
back in time as well to those who before had hoped for the coming of Christ. He
bore the sins of all the world, the perfect and sinless Son of God. After the
victory of His death and passion, He rose the third day, and appeared to
witnesses. He spent forty days with those witnesses before ascending into the
presence of God the Father to make intercession for us by means of his own
blood, the fulfillment of that image we see in the Biblical Yom Kippor,
where the High Priest, alive after making atonement, took the blood of the
sacrifice into the Holy of Holies and sprinkled the mercy seat- the image of
God’s throne.
When Jesus tells us He is without sin,
He tells of his love for us; for on the cross he offered that ransom for each
of us that no rich man can give for his brother. He said that He is the One,
and He dared to declare as His own the Name I AM. So, He reminds us of
his love as well, since this declaration also took Him closer to the cross. So,
when He calls you to the radical commitment that may even cost you your life,
as it does cost Christians in other lands who suffer persecution and martyrdom
even to this day, know that he already died for you. Know, as I say often, that
when you look up and see Him on the cross, and behold sorrow and love flow
mingled down, the shedding of his blood and pouring out of his soul unto death,
that you can and must take this love personally. Either reject him
completely, if you can, or fall down and worship him as your Lord and your God.
1. 1. Page
56
2. 2.Psalm
49: 6-8
3. 3. from
Isaiah 53
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
Friday, March 13, 2015
Fourth Sunday in Lent
Gal Galatians 4:21-31 * John 6:1-14
The Epistle and Gospel appointed for this Sunday teach us about the wide gulf
between God's grace, and the weakness and hopelessness of man's highest
aspirations apart from that grace. The Epistle is a blend of doctrine and St. Paul 's
autobiographical reminiscences that demonstrate the truth of that doctrine. The
occasion for the writing of the Epistle was a heresy that is described in the
15th chapter of the Book of Acts.
"And certain men which came down from Judaea taught the brethren, and
said, Except ye be circumcised after the manner of Moses, ye cannot be
saved." This so troubled the Church that the first Council was called, the
proto-Council of Jerusalem . This new and troubling doctrine
contradicted what all the Apostles had taught ever since the day that St. Peter
entered the house of Cornelius, and Gentiles had become part of the Church.
This heresy is called the Judaizer
heresy, and it has very much in common with a later heresy of the fourth
century. Pelagius in the fourth century
taught that man does not need the grace of God to become righteous, but can
achieve perfection by the power of the flesh. What the Judaizers did not understand, and what later
the Pelagians did not understand, is
expressed perfectly by St. Paul in another Epistle, the Epistle to the Church
in Rome: "For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the
flesh, God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin,
condemned sin in the flesh."1 The Law cannot save us, because the flesh
is weak. The Law, rather, serves the purpose of diagnosing our genuine
condition, that we are subject to sin and death, and that we need the Savior.
In this context Paul opens the whole
Epistle by contrasting the limited and weak state of man against the unlimited
power and wisdom of God.
The Gospel tells of a miracle that Jesus used for the purpose of teaching that
he alone is the food and drink of eternal life, that he imparts grace and
salvation as we partake of him, the true Bread from heaven. He not only wrought
our salvation: He himself is our salvation.
The Epistle
The only way to understand the Epistle is to know your Old Testament. The story
from Genesis about Hagar, and her son, is the story about two sons of Abraham,
Ishmael and Isaac. Both of them are the sons of Abraham, but Paul tells us that
one, Ishmael, was born after the flesh, the other, Isaac, after the spirit. St. Paul considers his
own life, and presents himself as an example of both of these, inasmuch as
before his conversion he was very much the son of Abraham, but only after the
flesh. Look at these words that were read today from the text we have heard:
"But as then he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born
after the Spirit, even so it is now." In the overall context of the
Epistle, this follows the autobiographical confession of St. Paul near its
beginning, where he wrote:
"For ye have heard of my conversation in time past in the Jews' religion,
how that beyond measure I persecuted the church of God, and wasted it:
And profited in the Jews' religion above many my equals in mine own nation,
being more exceedingly zealous of the traditions of my fathers." 2
And, this gives an autobiographical flavor to what comes near the end of this
Epistle:
"As many as desire to make a fair shew in the flesh, they constrain you to
be circumcised; only lest they should suffer persecution for the cross of
Christ. For neither they themselves who are circumcised keep the law; but
desire to have you circumcised, that they may glory in your flesh. But God
forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom
the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world. For in Christ Jesus
neither circumcision availeth anything,
nor uncircumcision, but a new
creature." 3
And, so also an earlier passage:
"Even as Abraham believed God, and it was accounted to him for
righteousness. Know ye therefore that they which are of faith, the same are the
children of Abraham." 4
Saul of Tarsus had
been that son of Abraham born only after the flesh, for he had yet to become a
full son of Abraham by faith in the Messiah. Born after the flesh a son of
Abraham, but not a son with the faith of Abraham, he persecuted the Church,
those who were born after the spirit, those born according to the promise which
was by faith. In those days he imagined that he was keeping the Law:
"Imagined" I say, because he described his own self-deception in no
uncertain terms, in yet another of his Epistles, and then describes the light
of truth that shined on him:
"Though I might also have confidence in the flesh. If any other man thinketh that he hath whereof he might trust
in the flesh, I more: Circumcised the eighth day, of the stock of Israel, of
the tribe of Benjamin, an Hebrew of the Hebrews; as touching the law, a
Pharisee; Concerning zeal, persecuting the church; touching the
righteousness which is in the law, blameless. But what things were gain to me,
those I counted loss for Christ. Yea doubtless, and I count all things but loss
for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I have
suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may win
Christ, And be found in him, not having mine own righteousness, which is of the
law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness
which is of God by faith."5
What Saul learned, on the day that Jesus Christ appeared to him, was that his
greatest crowning act of righteousness, persecuting the Church, was a filthy
rag,6 the sin of persecuting the Messiah himself. "Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?" But he also learned
that righteousness is accounted to us only through faith.
This was not simply any faith. The old
question of faith and works can be very misleading if we see these as mere
principles. What matters is not some thing called faith versus some thing
called works, but specifically faith in Jesus Christ Himself. Only that faith
can save us, because only Jesus Christ can do what the Law, the good, holy and
death-dealing Law that condemns us all, cannot do. What the Law cannot do is
not because it is weak, but because we are weak due to the Fall of man
into sin and death.
Saul, on the road to Damascus , lying in the dust
of death, now revealed by his own most righteous and zealous act to be a
miserable offender in desperate need of God's mercy, rises to become Saint Paul the Apostle.
No longer with self-deception that he had some righteousness of his own, but
instead having the righteousness of faith in the Messiah, Jesus, he is
forgiven, justified, and called to true service in the Kingdom of God.
So, when St. Paul
contrasts faith in Jesus Christ against the works of the Law, he speaks from
his own life. When he speaks of the good works to which Christians are called
(in full agreement with St. James), he speaks even of these as part of the life
of faith, something that charity itself, by the Holy Spirit, produces in us
because of our faith; not something that we can manufacture by our own
strength. So, he wrote to the Church in Ephesus :
"For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it
is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast. For we are his
workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath before
ordained that we should walk in them."7
St. Paul had been the son of the bondwoman, and he so cast out the son of the
bondwoman from his own heart and life, that he became the son of the free
woman; that is, in place of Saul the persecutor was Paul the Apostle; he was
born again, born of the spirit,8 a child of Abraham by faith. Now he receives
persecution rather than dishing it out. And, that share of persecution was part
of knowing Christ, fellowship with his sufferings in light of the hope of the
resurrection.
The Gospel
The very next verse, directly following the selection we have heard today from
the Gospel of John, says, "When Jesus therefore perceived that they would
come and take him by force, to make him a king, he departed again into a
mountain himself alone." Later, as recorded in the very same chapter, it
was this that prompted Jesus to say to the crowds that sought for him,
"Verily, verily, I say unto you, Ye seek me, not because ye saw the
miracles, but because ye did eat of the loaves, and were filled." 9
The crowd was interested in having the problems of this world solved. The
aspiration to have a king who would break the tyranny of a foreign empire, Rome , was understandable,
as was the desire for a king who could employ his miraculous power to feed the
nation. But, like those who later would teach salvation by some fleshly power,
the worldly focus of the crowd fell short of God's grace as He was revealing it
through His Son.
This miracle revealed that Jesus Christ places in the hands of his Apostles
miraculous food for all the people, and he does so in a desert place where no
one can keep himself alive. Where there is no means of feeding, and where there
is no power from human strength to bring forth bread from the earth, Jesus
Christ provides all that is needed. He sustains life, feeding the bodies of the
crowd to teach them that it is he who gives the only true bread, the food and
drink of eternal life. For, we are in the desert place, unable to keep
ourselves alive, unable to avoid the universal sentence for all human sin,
namely, death. No matter how long we hang on in this desert, we do not have in
ourselves the power to survive forever. Sooner or later, this applies to
each one of us: "Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return."10
It is from this miracle that the Lord begins to teach them, to lift the vision
of those who will see, and to speak the word to those who may hear:
"Then Jesus said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Moses gave you
not that bread from heaven; but my Father giveth
you the true bread from heaven. For the bread of God is he which cometh down from heaven, and giveth life unto the world. Then said they
unto him, Lord, evermore give us this bread. And Jesus said unto them, I am the
bread of life: he that cometh to me
shall never hunger; and he that believeth
on me shall never thirst."11
He went on:
"Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that believeth
on me hath everlasting life. I am that bread of life. Your fathers did eat
manna in the wilderness, and are dead. This is the bread which cometh down from heaven, that a man may eat
thereof, and not die. I am the living bread which came down from heaven: if any
man eat of this bread, he shall live for ever: and the bread that I will give
is my flesh, which I will give for the life of the world. The Jews therefore
strove among themselves, saying, How can this man give us his flesh to eat?
Then Jesus said unto them, Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except ye eat the
flesh of the Son of man, and drink his blood, ye have no life in you. Whoso eateth my flesh, and drinketh my blood, hath eternal life; and I
will raise him up at the last day. For my flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is
drink indeed. He that eateth my flesh,
and drinketh my blood, dwelleth in me, and I in him. As the living
Father hath sent me, and I live by the Father: so he that eateth me, even he shall live by me. This is
that bread which came down from heaven: not as your fathers did eat manna, and
are dead: he that eateth of this bread
shall live for ever."12
Not until "the night in which He was betrayed," when he broke the
bread and took the cup, did they know how to eat His Body and drink His Blood.
Those who continued to follow Him trusted Him enough to expect the revelation
that would explain his words. "Lord, to whom shall we go? thou hast the
words of eternal life," said Peter. And, later, in that night of the Last
Supper they were not disappointed.
Jesus Christ places into the hands of the ministers in His Church the means of
eternal life, this Sacrament "generally necessary to salvation." But,
remember that this sacrament is a means of grace only to those who believe in
Jesus Christ. As St. Paul tells us in the 11th chapter of his First Epistle to the Church
in Corinth ,
those who presume to eat and drink without faith, add sin to sin and incur
judgment. They do not receive the
grace of the sacrament. Therefore, our Book of Common Prayer only bids those
who come with "hearty repentance and true faith." To approach the
sacrament without "hearty repentance and true faith" is dangerous,
profiting nothing, incurring judgment. Therefore, as we have heard, Jesus
prefaced his teaching by saying, "Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that believeth on me hath everlasting life. I am
that bread of life."
When our Anglican Fathers wrote the first Book of Common Prayer in 1549, under
the direction of Archbishop Thomas Cranmer, they emphasized the need to eat and
drink the sacrament rather than merely to attend Mass. They gave the service we are having
this day a new and somewhat long name: "The Supper of the Lorde and the Holy Communion, commonly called
the Masse." Since then, to
emphasize the words of Christ ("take, eat...drink, ye all, of
this...") Anglicans have called the Mass by this Biblical name, full of
meaning: "Holy Communion." "Holy Communion" actually means
something; and what it means is very important. It takes us to the words of
Jesus Christ about Himself, and how
He gives himself that we may partakers of Him: "I AM the Bread of
life." The Name of God, "I AM" is contained in these words. The
grace of God is revealed in these words. He is our salvation.
When you approach the altar rail, know this is the gift of Christ to you, and
you are feeding on Him as he gives Himself. Come forward with hearty repentance
and true faith, or not at all; because, we are not trying to keep ourselves
alive by the efforts of our own flesh, weak as it is through sin. We put our
trust in Jesus Christ, and not without that faith that makes us children of
Abraham, born after the spirit because we were buried and risen with Christ in
baptism, partaking of him by that same faith as we receive Him in this
sacrament today.
Even the best aspirations of mankind, of hopes for this world and confidence in
our own ability, are nothing worth, compared to the grace of God revealed in
his Son, our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
And now, unto God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Ghost, be ascribed
as is most justly due, all might, majesty, dominion, power and glory, henceforth,
world without end. Amen.
1. Rom. 8:3
2. Gal.1:13,14
3. Gal. 6:12-15
4. Gal. 3:6,7
5. Phil. 3:4-9
6. Isaiah 64:6
7. Eph. 2:8-10
8. John 3:1-17, Rom.
6:1f
9. verse 26
10 Gen 1:19
11. John 6:32-35
12. John 6:47-58
Friday, March 06, 2015
Third Sunday in Lent
Spiritual
Warfare
(Deut. 6:1-9, 20-25, Psalm 25, Eph. 5:1-14, Luke 11:14-28)
The
Scriptures and the Collect for this Sunday draw our attention to the fact of
spiritual warfare, a very important theme all year long, not only in Lent. The
essence of spiritual warfare, and of the greatest need of every human being, is
summed up in the words of Jesus that we have heard already as the Gospel According
to Luke was read: “He that is not with me is against me: and he that gathereth not with me scattereth.” The real question for every
individual is this: Who is your king? Is Jesus Christ your king, or do you obey
the prince of this world?
When I was learning Hebrew at the
Baltimore Hebrew College (now the Baltimore Hebrew University), and learning it
the way that Jewish people are taught it (Sephardic
Hebrew in fact), I found that a verse from the Book of Isaiah is used in basic
instruction as an important tool because of how it rhymes. (I will stick to the
Jewish tradition of using Adonai whenever the original contains the
Name, YHVH.)
Kee Adonai Shoph’tenu
Adonai Makakenu
Adonai Malkenu
Hu Yeshienu
“For the LORD is our judge, the LORD is our lawgiver, the LORD is our king; he
is our Salvation.” Isaiah 33:22
This is the essence of what Jesus said
in today’s Gospel. We need him as our only Salvation; so we must acknowledge
him to be our Judge, our Lawgiver and our King. In the word for our Salvation,
do you see his name? Yeshienu,
the plural possessive of Yeshua-or
Jesus. He is our Judge, he is our Lawgiver, He is our King, and therefore, he
is our Salvation. We gather with him, our only Salvation, or we scatter, lost
forever.
The collect today speaks of God as “the
defence against our enemies”. What is meant by the use of the word enemies?
Classically, Christians have known there are three enemies: The world, the
flesh and the devil.
The image we are given in the Gospel
reading is that of the strong man being overcome by One even stronger than he.
The devil has dominated the world, and subjected mankind to his will since the
Fall. But, when Christ came into the world, He overcame the strong man and
spoiled his goods. However, we have yet to see our complete liberation, which
will be at Christ’s second coming. At that time even death itself will be
destroyed. What we are told is that we who belong to Christ have been set free
from the domination of Satan, but that for now our freedom must be completed by
enduring a battle. This battle is a defensive fight against the world, the
flesh and the devil.
There is also an offensive fight, one
in which the Church attacks, and Satan is forced to be on the defensive. That
is another subject, the subject of mission, of evangelism.
To answer one obvious and confusing
question, what is the world; that is in the sense in which it is an enemy? St. John tells us to love
not the world, nor to love the things in it: Those things are the lust of the
flesh, the lust of the eyes and the pride of life (I John 2:15f). The world, in
this sense, is defined in the first chapter of the Gospel of John, which we
hear often. Speaking of Christ, it says : “He was in the world, and the world
was made by Him, and the world knew Him not.” That verse tells of a great
tragedy, namely the Fall of Man into sin and death, the state from which Christ
redeems us. Because Man is the head of this created order, the fall is the Fall
of the whole world. And the definition of “the world” as an enemy, a force that
opposes us as Christians if we try to live a holy life, is found in these
words: “the world knew Him not.” The world does not know Christ.
To attack us, the world makes use of
our flesh, assaulting us with desires of the flesh, and of the eyes, and with
that deadly sin of pride, whereby we place ourselves upon the throne of God.
Imagining ourselves upon His throne, in our conceits, we demand and expect a
life to which we are not entitled; we think it an injustice when life is not
kind to us. We forget that if justice were served, we would be in hell; that
what evils befall us are less than we deserve. We forget to be thankful, and
instead complain against God. We refuse, indeed despise, the cross.
This is what the world, acting as our
enemy, does to us through our senses and through our conceits. It is to this
that St. Paul
speaks in the Epistle reading. And he does so with direct words about the
dangers that surround us, as well as those that come from within our own
hearts. Yet all the while he does so with words that give us hope. That hope is
because of the fact that we ourselves, though once a part of the very darkness
of sin and death itself, are now part of the light of life, because we are in
Christ.
And, we are given practical help in the
Old Testament commandment from Deuteronomy, to love God with all our heart,
soul, mind and strength. This commandment contains the most revered statement
in Jewish liturgy, the Sh’mai: Sh’mai Israel , Adonai Elehenu,
Adonai echod. “Hear O’ Israel , the
LORD our God, the LORD is one.”
Sh’mai is a very important word in Hebrew. It
means two things when translated into English. Depending upon how it is used,
it translates as “hear” or as “obey.” The first thing to obey is the great
commandment itself. “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and
with all thy soul, and with all thy mind.”
This is very practical. Consider this
simple fact. None of us here will be sinless, that is free of the full dangers
and lures of sin and temptation, until we are made perfect either after death
or at Christ’s coming again- whichever happens first. We remain in need of God’s
grace all the time. We will not achieve sinless perfection in this life. But,
we can, nonetheless, practice obedience. And obedience, though it includes
saying “no" to worldly desires, that is that it has its "no"
(because of God’s commandments that use the phrase “thou shalt not”), has, as
well, its “yes”. Obedience says both “no” and “yes”. No, to the world, no to
the flesh, no to the devil. But, all of these “nos” amount to a far greater and
single “yes” to God. And that “yes” is a yes to many things. To charity with
its demands and inconveniences, to prayer, to fasting and repentance, and also
to the taking up of the cross. Yes to taking up your cross is itself the big
“No” to the world, the flesh and the devil. It is the great “Yes” of love to God.
Jesus did not carry the cross only upon
one Friday. He carried it every day, living always to do the Father’s will
rather than His own. We say no to the world and yes to God when we give our
time to Him, when we give our strength to Him, instead of wasting it upon many
pleasure and cares. The world will drain all of our strength, if we give
ourselves to every fruitless activity that comes along; or if we destroy our
bodies (which belong to God) through drugs, alcohol or immorality, or even
through seemingly innocent things. Some people are inordinate about, for
example, shopping (we have heard the phrase “shop till you drop”). Our strength
must be yielded to God in love, not wasted and spent foolishly.
What does it mean to love God with all
thy mind? For example, in the Grocery stores, I cannot cease to be amazed at
how much paper and ink are wasted by tabloids that report news, or perhaps
create fiction, or perhaps a combination of the two, about the private lives of
celebrities, or something equally meaningless. Remember the slogan of the
United Negro College Fund: “A mind is a terrible thing to waste.”
We owe God the love of giving Him our
minds. When some people use the word “theology” as if it were a dirty word, it
tells me that they are afraid to love God with their minds, and in fact that
they despise those who try to so love Him. Remember a collect from Advent. Love
God and give your mind to Him as you “read, mark, learn and inwardly digest”
the scriptures.
And, the Lesson from Deuteronomy (at
Morning Prayer) commands us to teach our children, to inform their minds in the
truth of God’s word. Those who want their children to decide it all for
themselves, to come to their own conclusions about religion, sin by neglecting
the religious education of children entrusted to their care by God. The
scriptures do not give parents the right to neglect the spiritual formation and
education of their children. The modern idea that the children should figure it
all out for themselves is not an enlightened idea. Failure to teach them the
true Faith is a sin. They must be taught God’s word and raised in the Church;
for having had them baptized, Christian parents have brought them out of
Satan’s bondage into Christ’s kingdom; they do not belong to their parents, nor
to themselves. They are God’s children, and parents are entrusted (as
stewards) with their care and their godly upbringing. Furthermore, it is
not enough that they are taught in just any old church (or new); but that what
they are taught is the truth of God’s word.
We must, with God’s grace by His Holy
Spirit, withstand these three enemies: The world, the flesh and the devil,
because we belong, body, soul and strength, to God.
The word that fits here is the word
“asceticism.” This is a Lenten theme too. Now, if we want to be good modern
people, we must react negatively to this word. We must conjure up images of
sleeping on desert sands, fasting until we look like skeletons, perhaps of
sleeping like Hindus upon a bed of nails. The negative reaction must include a
bigoted rejection of the whole monastic life.
But, as followers of the Catholic Tradition, especially the English Catholic Tradition, the word “asceticism” must be understood in a practical way. We say “no” to those things that inhibit prayer and the growth of the virtues, not simply to obvious and gross sin. For example, we should not fit the normal American pattern of watching six hours of T.V. a day every day. I hope that our “yes” to God’s call upon our time for prayer, upon our mind in learning His word, and to serving Him in whatever good works He prepares for us to walk in, simply does not leave us with enough time for inordinate and intemperate, though seemingly innocent, misuse of time.
But, as followers of the Catholic Tradition, especially the English Catholic Tradition, the word “asceticism” must be understood in a practical way. We say “no” to those things that inhibit prayer and the growth of the virtues, not simply to obvious and gross sin. For example, we should not fit the normal American pattern of watching six hours of T.V. a day every day. I hope that our “yes” to God’s call upon our time for prayer, upon our mind in learning His word, and to serving Him in whatever good works He prepares for us to walk in, simply does not leave us with enough time for inordinate and intemperate, though seemingly innocent, misuse of time.
This practical saying of “yes” to God,
and taking up the cross of Christ, dying to our desires, withstanding the
world, the flesh and the devil, is true Christian asceticism. It is also to
love God with all your heart, all your soul, all your mind and strength. We
ought to clutter our lives with the presence of the Holy Spirit so fully that
the evil one can have no place in us to call home. These are practical ways to
live as people who gather with Christ, and therefore are not scattered.
Let us learn it in Lent. Let us live it
always.
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