Sunday, July 19, 2015

Our Peace (Proper 11B Epistle)

 
Our Peace
Proper 11B
19 July 2012; 8:00 a.m. Said Mass and 10:00 a.m. Sung Mass
Homily Delivered by the Rev. Fr. Tony Hutchinson, SCP, Ph.D.,
at Trinity Episcopal Parish
Ashland, Oregon


God, take away our hearts of stone, and give us hearts of flesh. Amen.

Twenty years ago this last week, one of the great horrors of modern European history took place.  On July 11-13, 1995, in and near the town of Srebrenica in Bosnia, soldiers and irregulars of the Bosnian Serb army rounded up and then murdered en masse over 8,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys, dumping their bodies into bull-dozed grave pits.  This act of genocide was part of a campaign of “ethnic cleansing” trying to create a “pure” Serbian enclave. 

Mourner at one of the Mass Reburials of the Victims

The horrors of Srebrenica reveal the costs of identity politics: working to create governmental and social power by appealing to people’s sense of belonging to one group or another.  Before the war, Bosnia/Herzegovina was a historically multi-ethnic region with about half its population Muslim Bosniaks, a slightly smaller number of Orthodox Serbs and about half that number of Catholic Croats.  Many people lived in perfectly happy mixed neighborhoods, and many of them in mixed families.  When the region attempted to declare its independence from Serbian-dominated Yugoslavia, Serbs there started the war to create their own separate enclave in the region.

When the war ended three years later after NATO intervention, the entire population had been traumatized and brutalized.  100,000 people were dead.  50,000 women, the vast majority of them Bosniak, had been raped.  2.2 million people had been driven from their homes, most of which were destroyed.

Bosnia is not alone in showing how dangerous identity politics are.  Think of Northern Ireland, the Middle East, and the partition of India and subsequent Indian-Pakistani wars, the crusades, Nazi anti-Semitism, the thirty years’ war of 17th century Europe, the civil wars in post-colonial Africa, the American Civil War, and the burden of Apartheid in South Africa and racism in the United States.  It does not matter whether the identity appealed to is religion, race, nationality, region, linguistic group, or any other group marker:  politics based on group identity is a deal with the devil. 

I took a course in mediation, peace building, and reconciliation from one of the chief U.S. negotiators behind the Dayton Accords, which created the framework that ended the Bosnian War.  I remember well: Ambassador John Menzies told me the single hardest difficulty he had to work to help people overcome was the fear and distrust generated when religious and ethnic identity were brought into the political mix.  The desire for revenge for atrocities only complicated these. “Group hatred is a genie that, once out of the bottle, is hard to put back in.”   

Identity politics is powerful and demonic stuff.  But that is because group identity is deeply ingrained in us as one of the great sources of joy, comfort and solace: our families, our people, our tribe.  In identifying with our group, we find ourselves and feel we have a place in this world.  Because it runs so deep, it is prone to powerful abuse. 

Today’s reading from Ephesians is all about group identity: 

“Remember that at one time you Gentiles by birth, … [were] aliens … and strangers to the covenants of promise…. But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ. For he is our peace… he has broken down the dividing wall, … he came and proclaimed peace to you who were far off and … to those who were near; for through him both of us have access in one Spirit to the Father. So then you are no longer strangers and aliens, but you are citizens with the saints and also members of the household of God….”

Our peace; no longer strangers and foreigners; he has broken down the dividing wall.  This is how a follower of St. Paul, writing in his name, characterizes the effect of Christ’s victory over death on the cross on his world.  The idea is that by suffering and overcoming the worst that the wickedness of the world could throw at him, Christ preached peace to those who were far off and those who were near, and broke down one of the great divisions of his world:  Jews and Gentiles.   

Paul himself had expressed the idea a little more expansively in these words:  “There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus” (Gal 3:28).

The idea is profound—in Christ, all divisions and distinctions are healed, all distinctions blurred, polarities centered, dualities united.
 
Think of the following divisions we make in our world: 

Rich and poor. 
Black and white.
Strong and weak.
Saints and sinners.
East and West.  (In the world, but also in the nation.)
North and South.  (ditto)
Male and female.
Catholic and Protestant.
Young and old.
Supervisor and subordinate.
Able-bodied and disabled.
Straight and Gay.
Republican and Democrat.
Native and foreigner.
Religious and secular.
Healthy and sick.

 “Christ is our peace; in him, we are one.” 

Ephesians is not saying that these groups cease to exist after the Cross and resurrection.  But it is saying that they no longer matter, that in light of the cross, they are secondary and unimportant. 


There is a deep logic to the argument.  Philosopher René Girard defines community as “unanimity minus one,” that is, a group united in accusing and expelling at least one of its own.  Community defines itself in part by pointing to those who are not part of the community.  It regulates itself by  scapegoating.  Community is not just joined hands and linked arms of embrace.  It in its structure is also the pointing finger of accusation, of exclusion.   

Anthropologists have noted that most of the world’s primitive cultures have myths that express this dynamic.  Generally a dissident, abnormal, or impure member of the community is singled out, driven out, and often killed in the myth.  Thereby the community is made whole.  Impurity and wrong are thus purged.  

Girard notes that Christians have their own version of this myth, based on the death of our Lord:  the crowd points their fingers at Jesus and calls for his death, he is brutalized, taken outside the city walls, and killed.  

But the difference is this:  in the Christian telling, Jesus is innocent.  It is he who is right, and the community that is wrong.  This story condemns the  dark side of community, the accusation, the driving outside the city wall, the scapegoating itself, not the accused deviant put to death outside of the city walls.  Easter morning tells us that everything has been turned on its head here.   

Thus Ephesians says that Christ on the cross preaches peace to those who are far off and those who are near.  The resurrection condemns accusation itself.  The cross, that cruel tool the Roman Empire used to enforce community, that instrument of public terror as an act of policy, is itself undone by the resurrection of our Lord.

And it is not just the accusation of group hatred that is undone by the cross.  Our own accusation of ourself, our own sense of guilt is undone by Jesus’s unjust death at the accusers’ hands and his being raised from it.  As Paul says elsewhere, Jesus “erased the record against us from any legal demands. He set this aside, nailing it to the cross”  (Col. 2:24)

Thus Christ, once driven outside the wall, becomes our peace, and breaks down all dividing walls.  He brings those far off, those driven outside the walls themselves, back, and brings them near.    

That’s what all the shepherd imagery in today’s other readings is about:  where the kings of Israel, called the shepherds of the people, here the bad shepherds, failed them, in large part by striving too hard to maintain their advantage over other nations, by playing identity politics, Jesus sustains them and brings them all together—regardless of their background—into a single fold.  He tends them not because they are his sheep and others are not, but, because like in today’s Gospel, he sees that they need a shepherd.  And so he feeds them and serves them, regardless of their origins.

It is not just the alienation between groups that Jesus breaks down.  He also destroys the alienation within each of us because of the accusation built into our individual lives.  Anthropologists and critical theorists who work in the area of liminality, the puzzling places where we are at the margins or caught between group identities, value systems, or ritual status, note that being on the margins causes great stress and doubt, often experienced as self-alienation.

What alienates us from ourselves?  What makes us accuse ourselves? 
It usually is difference, the difference between:
What we desire versus what we actually have.
What we ought to do versus what we actually do.
What our community expects of us versus who we are in reality.
How we’d like to be versus how we actually are.

Even in this, “Christ is our peace; in him we are one.”  The cross and resurrection tell us that we ought not accuse ourselves.  They tell us that we are one, that we are beloved. 

Gillian Welch’s Appalachian-style hymn “Orphan Girl” expresses alienation and Jesus’ role in driving it away well, and speaks to my heart: 

I am an orphan on God's highway
But I'll share my troubles if you go my way
I have no mother, no father
No sister, no brother
I am an orphan girl. 

But when He calls me I will be able
To meet my family at God's table
I'll meet my mother, my father
My sister, my brother
No more an orphan girl

Blessed Savior make me willing
Walk beside me until I'm with them
Be my mother, my father
My sister, my brother
I am an orphan girl
I am an orphan girl

Loved ones, alienation is real, whether between groups or within our hearts.  We are all orphan girls.  We are all strangers and foreigners.  We try to make ourselves feel better about it by clinging to our group, our family, our tribe, defined in part by making strangers and foreigners of others.   We accuse scapegoats or blame enemies; we also accuse ourselves as forlorn, desolate losers.  But Jesus took this all with him outside the wall, and it died with him.  In the light of Easter morning, we can see that it is all a sham. 

In Christ, we are one.  In Christ, we are no longer orphans.  We are no longer strangers and foreigners.  He has broken down the dividing walls, and has nailed the accuser’s power itself to the cross.   He is our peace. 


Thanks be to God.     


   

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