Sunday, April 21, 2019

Whom Do You Seek? (Easter Sunday C)



Whom do you seek?  
The Very Rev. Fr. Tony Hutchinson, SCP, Ph.D.
Easter C
21 April 2019 8:00 a.m. and 10 a.m. Festive Choral Sung Eucharists
Parish Church of Trinity, Ashland (Oregon)


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

Four years ago, I went on pilgrimage to the Holy Land.  I was moved again and again by the various sites we visited. It was all very meaningful, but I always had the haunting question of how many of the sites were identified by 4th century pious imagination or actually had real claims to be where events took place in the first century.    

The most certain of all, I think, were the sites associated with the night of Jesus’ arrest.  Gethsemane still has 4 trees that were alive when Jesus prayed and was arrested there.  From the garden, it is about a 45 minute brisk walk down the Kidron Valley and up a long flight of stone steps from the first century that have been excavated and are still extant to the site of the High Priest Caiaphas’ palace: on a promontory across a valley looking out onto the Temple Mount and what was the Roman governor’s palace.   At the top of that flight of steps that a bound Jesus was forced to march up, there now stands the Church of Gallicantu, the Church of the Cock’s Crow.   In the stone plaza before the Church there stands a statue of a rooster singing the morning and of a weeping St. Peter, where almost certainly that sad tale is set.  In the crypt of the Church, four or five stories down through 2,000 years’ worth of dust and rubble, is a warren of 1st century cells carved out of the stone beneath the now long-lost palace.  When archaeologists excavated the crypt caves in the 1800s, they found 2nd century Christian graffiti, still visible, crosses carved into their walls marking the site as one of early Christian special devotion.  Almost certainly, it was in one of these cramped, unlit, and forgotten pits that our Lord spent his last night.

Standing in the damp lowest cell, I felt the claustrophobic and pressing fear that the lights might be extinguished.  I could only imagine what fears beset Jesus there, knowing almost certainly what awaited him in the morning. 

We talk here at Trinity a lot about the Celtic idea of thin places: where the veil between this world and the spirit world is so thin that it is almost transparent.  We feel awe and inspiration in these glorious mountains around us and the nearby ocean, and realize that there is something deep beneath all this. We often feel it in places like the isle of Iona or Skellig Michael, or in the great cathedrals.  Many of us feel it in small intimate churches like Trinity. 

But there are other thin places, places that touch the darkness rather than the light:   Vimy Ridge, where hundreds of thousands died in WWI trenches; Auschwitz, in Poland; the Slavery’s Road of No Return in Benin; the Choeung Ek “Killing Fields” in Cambodia; Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan; the Pearl Harbor monument; the Memorial to the Victims of the Rape of Nanjing in China, and the 9/11 Memorial in New York City.  That ancient little cell in Jerusalem, in its dark, dank way, participates in such dark thinness.

Our lives, as wonderful as they are, can be haunted by darkness.  Just as the bright thin places give us glimpses of the joy and love beneath creation, these dark thin places point to the pain of human existence: war, hatred, famine, abuse, and ultimately death, the great leveler of all.  

The reality of that cell, of the unjust arrest, torture, and execution of Jesus touched me.    In it I recognized an old acquaintance:  fear of meaninglessness, of random ugliness, and horror.  Fear that might makes right, that looking out for number one in the here and now is the only reasonable life strategy in a world where death is the final destination. 

A fragment of the earliest preaching of the apostles is found in 1 Corinthians 15, dating only 20 years after the events:  Christ died for our sins, was buried, was raised from the dead, and then appeared, first to Cephas and the Twelve, then to more than 500 believers, and then to James and the apostles (1 Cor. 15:5-7).   

That little cell connected me with Christ’s passion; where might I find a thin place that connects me to the resurrection?   The sites in Jerusalem that claim to be where all this took place do not do it for me: the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, or the so-called Garden Tomb.  Perhaps it is because these sites are so hotly contested as key holy tourism properties by conflicting denominations.  But a greater reason is that the actual stories of the crucifixion and resurrection in our Gospels include many elements that seem to be later meditations on and legendary narrative additions to that earliest apostolic preaching, additions that are often at odds with each other.   

But there is a more basic problem:  seeking the living Jesus in the dead ruins of that earlier age.  Here in this theater town, Ashland, it is worth noting that one of the great precursors to modern theater is a Medieval Miracle Play based on today’s reading from the Gospel of Luke:  a dialogue between the Marys who come to the tomb and the angels who interrupt them: 

Whom do you seek in the tomb, O dwellers in Christ?
Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified, O dwellers in heaven. 
He is not here; he is risen, just as he foretold. Go, announce that he is risen from the tomb. 

Another Gospel and other forms of the Miracle Play add the line “why do you seek the living among the dead?” 

Whom do you seek?  If you are a dweller in Christ, why seek him among the dead?  We are no longer talking here about the historical Jesus, but the Cosmic Christ.   Do not seek him in his tomb. 

I think the thin place here for us is the Table to which Jesus invites us, where he said his body and blood, life-giving nourishment, are to be found.  It is found in the coming together of his followers to pray, encourage, and eat the gifts offered on that altar-table.  It is found in communion, inclusive community, and service.

Easter is not a myth, nor a fairy tale, but a glimpse, shocking and overwhelming, of ultimate reality.  It’s easy to dismiss these stories as naïve, nice, but naïve.  It’s easy to dismiss them as wish-fulfilment—wonderful, perhaps, but not real.  Maybe, we sometimes think, the story of Jesus ends in the dark tomb.  Maybe might does make right, only the strong survive, and we need above all to look out for number one.   Such feelings are part of being human, of being spirits in the material world. 

But, as Presiding Bishop Michael Curry asks concerning such questions, “How’s that workin’ out for ya?”  How’s that workin’ out for the world?” 

Not well at all.  In a world where only the strong survive, the wicked prosper and the gentle suffer.  Looking out only for number one, for our own family, our own group, our own nation, puts all of life into a negative ledger. 

God raising Jesus from the dead turns all of this on its head:  in the refulgent light streaming from the empty tomb, we see that the poor, hungry, and thirsty are indeed blessed, the mourning comforted, the meek provided for, and the impure, unclean, and diseased made whole and accepted.  We see that the only way of saving our life is losing it, of being first is being last, and of making a nation great again is in making it good again, or maybe good for the first time. 

Jesus shows us the way: unselfish, sacrificial love, love of God and of our fellow creatures.  Jesus is the Way:  the means of grace, and the hope of glory.  Death is not the end.  All will be well in the end, and if all is not well, we are not at the end.    This is the ultimate reality, not a myth or fairy tale.

Beloved:  Christ died for our sake.  He was buried.  One and a half days later, he came forth again, and he appeared to his disciples. He appeared in such a way that they knew he was no resuscitated corpse, no ghost, no dream, nor wish-fulfillment.  It was wholly unprecedented and the disciples clearly had problems finding adequate language to express what they had seen, felt, and experienced.  The details in the later stories only underscore this process.   

The zombies and ghosts of popular imagination are less alive than the people they once were.  But not so with Jesus risen from the tomb:  He was more alive than he had ever been, and more lively and free as a subject and actor.  This is why the disciples quickly hailed him as Lord and God.  

Christ is raised.  And this changes everything in our world.   

In the name of Christ,  Amen.

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