Sunday, May 18, 2014

Living Stones (Easter 5A)

 

Living Stones
17 May 2014
Fifth Sunday of Easter Year A
Parish Church of Trinity, Ashland (Oregon)
8:00 a.m. Said and 10 a.m. Sung Mass

God, give us hearts open to change and growth,
Ground us in You, Our Rock and Unshakeable Refuge.
Amen.

Wow.  Most of our readings today have stones or rocks in them. The Psalm says, "O God, You are my Rock!" The Epistle talks about Christ being a stone giving us life, the capstone of the Temple, though once rejected in the quarry as flawed, and of us believers all being stones infused with Christ’s life in a Temple—the House of God—built to give acceptable offerings to God. The Gospel talks about that House of God where Jesus invites us to follow him:  “In my Father’s House, there is more than enough room.  Otherwise, why do you think I’d invite you to come there with me? I am the way to that House, the truth, and the life.”  He might as well has said, “I am the Rock all this is built on.”  And the first lesson—that horrible story of the murder by stoning of one of the first seven deacons of the Church, Stephen.

It is good during the Great Fifty Days of Easter to hear these stories from the Book of Acts.  But I think it a little sad that we read them instead of the Hebrew scriptures.  The substitution has the unintended effect of encouraging us to think of the Hebrew Scriptures as the “Old” Testament, and Judaism as valuable only as a pale hint of the glorious faith to come, Christianity, rather than something to be cherished and valued on its own terms.  And stories like today’s emphasizing the growing rift between the followers of Jesus and their compatriots who place more trust in their traditional faith than they do in Christ only make it worse. The stories see them increasingly as outsiders:  they arrest and persecute the disciples.  In today’s story, members of a particular Synagogue are unhappy with the competition the deacon Stephen presents them.  They accuse him of blaspheming the House of God and the Law of Moses that it embodies, saying that Jesus of Nazareth will come back to destroy the Temple and change the Laws.   Stephen, “looking like an angel,” reacts in kind, harshly saying “you are a stiff-necked people, uncircumcised of heart, always opposing the Holy Spirit, and killing the prophets as your ancestors did” (Acts 7:51-53).  “You” and “Us.” Clear divisions between good guys and bad guys, whether you are on Stephen’s side or his opponents’.  Stephen’s accusers pick up stones and kill him.   How could they not be bad guys? 

Dividing the world into “good guys” and “bad guys” may be satisfying for telling a riveting story and stirring the fires of tribal and family attachment.  But it is contrary to Jesus’ teachings:  “Be wholly complete like God—who impartially gives the blessing of rain and sunshine equally to the ‘righteous’ and the ‘wicked’” (Matt. 5:44, 48).  “The first will be last and the last first”… the ‘good guys’ will be turn out to be bad, and the ‘bad guys’ turn out good (Matt. 20:16).   A pillar of righteous living goes to the Temple to pray and so does a notorious sinner—the Pharisee and the Tax Collector—and guess who goes home right with God? (Luke 18:9-14). 

If I owe my neighbor love, who is my neighbor?  Who is on this side of that line?   Jesus replies with a story of hated foreigner showing compassion while the religious stalwarts walk on by.  You create neighbors by being compassionate with them, not by drawing lines between our tribe and its barbarian enemies.

“Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.” “Forgive others as you would want to be forgiven.”

Every single one of us is a mixture of good and bad.  We are all God’s creatures.  Labeling a whole person or group as “Good” or “Bad” only confuses matters.  The line between good and bad is not between groups of people, but runs down the middle of each and every human heart.    So we need to pray even for our enemies.  We are all in this together. 

In the Harry Potter books, Harry’s Godfather tells him, “We've all got both light and dark inside us. What matters is the part we choose to act on. That's who we really are.”  His mentor Professor Dumbledore tells him:  “It is our choices, Harry, that show what we truly are….”  

If these stories are not about good guys vs. bad guys, why do some people in these stories accept Jesus as the Rock, and others pick up rocks to kill people like Stephen?  What is it in our hearts that allows some of us to accept the apostles’ witness, yet others to reject it and try to stamp out this belief even by murder?   What makes some of us cry “Joy!” and others, “Blasphemy!” What in our hearts leads us to be living stones or to pick up stones of death?  

There are some hints in the Hebrew Scriptures that 1 Peter quotes.  They all use the image of Rock to describe God.    



1 Peter quotes from Isaiah about those who try to seek a sense of security by deceiving themselves"  

 “Look! I am placing a foundation stone in Jerusalem, a firm and tested stone, a precious cornerstone, safe to build on.  Whoever trusts in it need never be  shaken. I will test you with the measuring line of justice and the plumb line of uprightness.  Since you have made your refuge out of lies, a hailstorm will knock it down.  Since it is made of deception, a flood will sweep it away. [Not so, the Rock I offer!] (Isaiah 28:15-17, my paraphrase).  

 This was probably the passage Jesus was thinking about when he gave his parable of the house built on a rock and when he gave Peter his name, meaning “Rock,” after his declaration of faith in Jesus. 

Faith based on the Rock must be grounded in truth, not self deception.  It must respond to the realities of our experiences.  And its ultimate measure is justice, fairness, and right dealing with others.  

1 Peter also quotes a Psalm of praise to God from someone who had been in horrible straits, set upon by persecutors until almost dead, whom God surprisingly rescues.  The turnaround is described this way: 

17-20 I didn’t die. I lived!
    And now I’m telling the world what Yahweh did.
21-25 Thank you for responding to me;
    you’ve truly become my salvation!
The stone the masons discarded as flawed
    is now the capstone!

This is Yahweh’s work.
    We rub our eyes—we can hardly believe it!
On this day, Yahweh has acted!
    let’s celebrate and be festive!  (Psalm 118:17-24, my paraphrase, using some of the Message paraphrase) 

Christians ever since the beginning have used this Psalm to describe the resurrection of Jesus. It is a mainstay in our Easter liturgies.  The very fact that Jesus’ case was so hopeless—dead and buried in a quarried tomb—is why Peter uses this image of a flawed quarry stone once cast away, but wondrously now a finished, precious, capstone of a great building. 

Peter adds a final passage to tell us of this mystery of the heart, another oracle from Isaiah: 

14The Holy One can be either a Hiding Place
    or a Boulder blocking your way,
The Rock standing in the way of the willful …
A net preventing trespass…
15Many are going to run into that Rock
    and get their bones broken,
Get tangled up in that net
    and not get free of it.”
 (Isa 8:14-15. my paraphrase, using some of the Message paraphrase)

I do not know why sometimes we are able to joyfully accept new things from God and other times we aren’t.

Part of it comes from enjoying and loving what we have received from God in the past.  New things present themselves as strange, risky, and possibly a betrayal.  Sometimes in these matters, bitterness can grow where we are feeling uncertain, on shaky ground.   The Rock we thought was unshakeable has turned out to be unstable.   We perhaps talk to others rather than to the one we think is strange.  As seen in this Synagogue in Acts, gossip and grumbling thus can become the first step on the possibly deadly road of faction and schism.  We begin by trying to relieve our own anxiety and fear by labeling the others as bad guys

I read news this last week from the Church of England Cathedral in Salisbury, home of the famous Sarum Use originally behind much of our Prayer Book liturgy.  

A couple of years ago, they had to re-gild their somewhat dingy and bedraggled organ pipes.  Congregants howled.  It made them more luminous and bright than anyone had every seen.  Too bright.  Many bemoaned “change for change’s sake.”  Today, everyone there loves the warmer, more personal feel the bright organ gives the Nave. 

Now the Cathedral is faced with the need to replace their old and broken baptismal font.  A Cathedral parish process was initiated, design proposals solicited and competed.  The committee has chosen a modern “living water” design where the narthex has the visual richness of the font plus the sound of pouring and flowing water.  Again, there are angry howls. 

The Dean, flummoxed at trying to engage everyone in the process and saddened that nothing was learned from the organ pipes, made this statement to the Press, as best as I remember: “I understand not wanting change for change’s sake.  We must value and honor our past and the rich experience we have had of God.  But change is an unavoidable part of our lives and is demanded if we are to grow.  Wanting no change for no change’s sake is spiritually deadly.” 

It is important to honor and value where we have come from.  This is why we must not demonize or belittle Judaism.  It is also why we must not belittle or demonize Eastern Orthodoxy or Roman Catholicism, or the great insights of the Reformation.  We must in this all be open to God doing a new, wondrous act. 

C.S. Lewis wrote famously, the one prayer that God can never grant, will never grant, is the prayer after we have received grace and light from God, the prayer that says, “Encore!” 
 
We need to base ourselves on Jesus as the living Rock, have full assurance of being beloved by him, and no fear.  Only thus can we serve as living stones for others.  Only thus can the House of which we are part make truly acceptable sacrifices to God. 

In reflecting of these stories this week, I invite us all to apply Isaiah’s standards of truth, justice, and fairness with others when looking at our own attachments to the past.   Are our feelings in any of these matters firmly grounded in confidence in Jesus who will never let us down?  Or does it grow from fear of losing what we once enjoyed, and that now find fading or gone?  Do we choose to label and draw lines, rather than take responsibility for our feelings and enter into uncomfortable conversations with the strange?

Do we choose to be living stones, or stones of death?   

In the name of God,  Amen.

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