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.
Father Hart do you consider the church to be the prolongation of the incarnation of Christ? In other words to you see the church as the ongoing incarnation of Christ, like some of the father's did?
ReplyDeleteFather Hart what do you think about the following from Benedict?
ReplyDeleteFor this reason Luther's phrase: "faith alone" is true, if it is not opposed to faith in charity, in love. Faith is looking at Christ, entrusting oneself to Christ, being united to Christ, conformed to Christ, to his life. And the form, the life of Christ, is love; hence to believe is to conform to Christ and to enter into his love. So it is that in the Letter to the Galatians in which he primarily developed his teaching on justification St Paul speaks of faith that works through love (cf. Gal 5: 14).
Paul knows that in the twofold love of God and neighbour the whole of the Law is present and carried out. Thus in communion with Christ, in a faith that creates charity, the entire Law is fulfilled. We become just by entering into communion with Christ who is Love. We shall see the same thing in the Gospel next Sunday, the Solemnity of Christ the King. It is the Gospel of the judge whose sole criterion is love. What he asks is only this: Did you visit me when I was sick? When I was in prison? Did you give me food to eat when I was hungry, did you clothe me when I was naked? And thus justice is decided in charity. Thus, at the end of this Gospel we can almost say: love alone, charity alone. But there is no contradiction between this Gospel and St Paul. It is the same vision, according to which communion with Christ, faith in Christ, creates charity. And charity is the fulfilment of communion with Christ. Thus, we are just by being united with him and in no other way.
At the end, we can only pray the Lord that he help us to believe; really believe. Believing thus becomes life, unity with Christ, the transformation of our life. And thus, transformed by his love, by the love of God and neighbour, we can truly be just in God's eyes.
It indicates that he had read one of Luther's greatest sermons, that faith produces love, which in turn produces good works.
ReplyDelete