Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Faith and Resurrection (Midweek)

 
 
Fr. Tony’s Midweek Message
Faith and Living as Resurrection People
April 15, 2015  
 
“Am I a bad person if I don’t believe these Easter stories?”  “How much of the Creed must I believe?”  Parishioners at different times have asked me these questions.  I try always to remind them that the Creed is aspirational,
a statement of hope and where our concerns lie, not a loyalty oath or measure of worthiness. In this beautiful season of Spring and Eastertide, it is important to remember a couple of basic things about what faith and belief are. 
 
Faith is not about explaining stuff. Faith is not about defining things. It is not about techniques to control things or on how to get ahead. It is about trust, about openness. It is an orientation of the heart, not a content of opinions or positions we subscribe to, or even rules of technical mastery or of success. 
 
When we say “I believe in God,” we are not saying, “I am of the opinion that an entity referred to as God exists.” The word believe, though it now usually means “hold as true,” actually is related to the old Germanic word for heart, Lieb, and it means “give my heart to.” As Professor Marcus Borg often said, we might better use the word “belove” rather than “believe.”  
 
“I believe in God” actually means something like, “I trust God,” or even, “within God, in relationship with God, I love for all I’m worth.”   
 
This is clear when we look at one of the other lines of the Creed, “I believe in the … Church.” We are not saying, “I believe the Church exists,” but rather, within the context of the Church, within the embrace of its loving community, I love for all I’m worth.” 
 
How can we believe in God, especially when God, both in history and in many of our personal lives, has been so misused as a tool of control and abuse?  
 
Faith is about wonder. It is about trust. It is about hope, having an ultimate optimism that all will finally be well, despite the risk, horror, and darkness that seem to be so much a part of life. It is not wish fulfillment, as Freud tried to explain.   The orientation of the heart we call faith or belief, is tied up part and parcel with story, narrative, song and ritual. It is a transcendental way of processing our life experience and giving us a sense of meaning and value.  
 
The fact is, metaphor is the basic idiom of the language of faith. One of the great Theologians of the Church said it was “the analogy of being.” These stories we tell are ways not to explain how things happen, but point beyond the how and details or process to meaning, to the ultimate “why.” 
 
Incarnation and resurrection: two sides of the same coin. Light shines in the darkness, God takes on all that it means to be human, including dying unjustly. And then, against all expectations, the dead Jesus comes to newer, fuller, more lively life. These images point to the basic experience we have of God rescuing us from all that is the matter, whether ignorance, loneliness, failings, guilt, addictions or obsessions, or ill health.
 
This does not mean that faith language is not true, or doesn’t say what it seems to say. It means that if we reduce it to mere proposition or opinion, and take it merely as literal, it ceases to be the language of faith. It loses the wonder. It becomes a dead thing, stale, and utterly unable to move us or give us hope. No surprise that literalistic or overly dogmatized readings of faith language generally repel people and turn them away from the hope that is God.  
 
Our basic hope in the meaning and sense of human life is expressed in the acclamation: “Christ is risen! The Lord is risen indeed! Alleluia!” 
 
Grace and Peace,  Fr. Tony+

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