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24 June 2018

The Stranger that Is Among You


“The Stranger that is among you.”

Matthew 25:35, 36 – Grace – Sunday 24 June 2018


For I was hungry and you gave me food. I was thirsty and you gave me drink. I was a stranger and you welcomed me. I was naked and you clothed me. I was sick and you visited me. I was in prison and you came to me. (35, 36 ESV) . . . Truly I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it to me.” (40)

In the ESV, the heading on this portion of Matthew’s gospel is titled “The Final Judgment.” It is the most direct and clear warning Jesus gives about who will spend eternity in His presence and who won’t. None of the issues that our age has allowed to define who is Christian and who isn’t are found in the text. Theological purity, the role of women in the church, sexuality, abortion, marriage, etc. are not mentioned. That doesn’t mean those issues don’t deserve attention – just that they can’t be allowed to define us. 

On the final night of His life, in a room where He has just washed twelve sets of dirty feet – including those of the one who would betray Him, Jesus says, “A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another; just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another. BY this all people will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.” (John 13:34, 35 ESV)

On more than one occasion we are reminded that the entire Law and Prophets can be summarized and fulfilled in two fundamental behaviors: love God, and love neighbor. In what may be among the most powerful of the parables Jesus tells – we know our “neighbor” is the whole world. (Luke 10)

In the story Jesus tells that might be the most convicting of the convicting stories, the rich man – whose name we aren’t even told – spends eternity separated from God because he routinely ignored the poor, sore covered, dog-licked, crumb eating, emaciated beggar – whose name we do know – Lazarus at his front gate every day. (Luke 7)

Sojourners

The Bible is a narrative in which we bump into hundreds of “strangers at the gates” of our lives in a variety of contexts. I guess you would have to say it all started with Adam and Eve – who sojourn into a world infected with sin and death. After their son Cain kills his brother, he becomes a wanderer of sorts. The same might be said for Noah and his family – and after the Tower of Babel, being “strangers” seems to be the only option.

What if God had decided to ignore humankind since we were so “different” from Him?
But He didn’t ignore us. He called Abram and Sarai and sent them on the journey of a life time. Read their story, it starts in Genesis 12. By the time we know them as Abraham and Sarah and the parents of Isaac – they have crossed more international boundaries than I can count and have had to interact with all sorts of governing officials – not all of whom were particularly good people.

Later Jacob and his sons will go to Egypt – interestingly enough because of a famine in their land to seek food in Egypt. While that story plays itself out across generations, a man named Moses will kill both an Egyptian and a Hebrew, and out of fear for his life, flee to the land of Midian. In what may be among the most ironic of ironic twists of plots, Moses will go back to Egypt and lead the descendants of Jacob across boundary after boundary – headed to a new, safer, more peaceful “land of milk and honey.” 

The truth is, if you read the Hebrew Bible with some degree of care – you no doubt walk away with the impression that the God we love and worship has always been “an Exodus-kind of God.” He is constantly seen moving people around on the one hand; but insisting that His people care for the sojourner on the other.

When Moses is reviewing the Law just prior to his death, he addresses this issue from God’s perspective head on: “He (God) executes justice for the fatherless and the widow, and loves the sojourner, giving him food and clothing. Love the sojourner, therefore, for you were sojourners in the land of Egypt.” (Deut. 10:18, 19  ESV)

What interests me, in some ways, about these words, is that they were said to Israel in a time in the history of God’s relationship with humankind that the idea of separation was pretty important. But, the moral code of the law combined with an ethic focused on loving God and loving neighbor simply makes it impossible for even Israel, the chosen of God, not to care about the sojourners. Their story includes the fact that they too were once sojourners! 

In Leviticus, the most “law of the law” kinds of book, we are told, “When a stranger sojourns with you in your land, you shall not do him wrong. You shall treat the stranger who sojourns with you as the native among you, and you shall love him as yourself, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt. I am the Lord your God.”  (19:33-35  ESV)

It shouldn’t go unnoticed that James, in the epistle that bears his name, says, “Religion that is pure and undefiled before God, the Father, is this: to visit orphans and widows in their affliction, and to keep oneself unstained from the world.”  (James 1:27  ESV) Apparently the gospel walks beyond, not away from, what the Law demanded of Israel.
It appears to me that it is a dangerous thing to use “the Law” as an excuse for why we are giving up on the character of God. 

Jesus and Sojourners

As the Law encouraged Israel to remember – Jesus likely remembered that He too once was a sojourner. His parents took Him to Egypt – a foreign nation, an unclean nation for that matter to Jews, because of the genocide like behavior of Herod the Great. When they finally come back, they end up living in Nazareth – not exactly the quality city of the world of the first century – but safer from the political turmoil of the day
.
Has it ever dawned on us that the very people who were so drawn to Jesus were people whose lives were lived in the authentic risk of danger, daily. The well-to-do, politically connected, religiously powerful people crucified Him. The poor people, the outcasts, the oppressed, the hungry, - they found in Jesus a kind of motivation to live in the presence of God’s protection in ways they could not have imagined – were it not for the very character of Jesus.

Of course – the simple truth is – often overlooked – is that as a human, Jesus came here an alien. “He emptied Himself of equality with God to take on the form of a bondservant because he was made in human likeness.” (Phil. 2:5-11) That old hymn I grew up singing at church – “out of the ivory palaces, into a world of woe, only his great, eternal love, made my savior go.” 

What if our redeemer God refused to be a sojourner among us? What if His attitude toward people different than him was what so many in our current religious culture seems to be?

But . . . “it’s the Law”

If Paul isn’t spinning in his grave, it’s only because we really don’t stay in our graves if we belong to Jesus. The abuse of his comments about government in Romans 13 is simply stunning. But, more than a few self-perceived Christian spokesmen are saying of the issues at the border with children right now – “but it’s the law of the land, it has to be enforced.”

Well. That’s nice. The “law of the land” in the world in which the author of Romans 13 lived insisted that “only Caesar is Lord.” Do you really think Paul obeyed that Law?

In our land, abortion is “legal.” But Christians tend to insist on breaking that Law. Same-sex marriage is now legal, but some of the same people defending the border incident with “it’s the law of the land” are celebrating that the Supreme Court ruled that a bakery can insist they don’t recognize that Law.

Honestly – if “the law of the land” is the issue – then we should make plans not to celebrate the Fourth of July and instead go to London to celebrate the Queen’s birthday.

I know this is complex and I know it isn’t as simple as one side saying “build the wall and close the border” and the other side saying “let one and all in – ask no questions.”

But what I know with even more conviction is that when I became a follower of Jesus, I gave him my full allegiance. Period. I’m not saying I have always lived up to that – but I am saying that’s the standard. 

As a group of believers, we have sent several thousands of dollars to help refugees in Syria and the Middle East. I love that we have done that. We have spent several thousands of dollars helping a pregnant teen and her family; and lots of dollars on places like One Roof, Bridging the Gap, and other similar ministries.

Sojourners are all around us. We can’t let politics get in the way of reflecting that when all is said and done, our allegiance is to Jesus, the pioneer of our faith. He came to rescue sojourners like us – and calls us to follow His lead.

Some of you know that I am a huge fan of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Over the last twenty or so years, I have read multiple biographies of his life and lots of his writings. His little book Life Together is one that I read a couple of times every year, give as gifts to people, and make a required reading in one of my classes at Point. 

I tell you that to say this. In the world of Nazi Germany leading up the WWII, the church in Germany stilled its tongue in the name of “the economy is better” or “Germany is great again.” In response to the oppressive accords at the Versailles Conference, it is easy to understand how people might have closed their eyes to other abuses in the name of getting beyond abuses imposed on them.

But, the sad story of history is that “the official church” kept quiet when it should have been a prophetic voice for justice, decency, and the idea that all humans – in their case, even Jews – were made in the image of God.

In 2004, I had the high privilege to have coffee in mid-afternoon with Professor Otto Betz and his wife in their home in Tuebingen, Germany. Professor Betz was about the same age as Bonhoeffer, but kept quiet, perhaps because otherwise he would lose his job in the university.

With big tears running down his cheeks, he said, “We knew what they were doing (the Nazis) – but wouldn’t speak up because of fear.”  I can’t remember a more moving moment in terms of realizing the cost of being a follower of Jesus.

I don’t want to say that we are on the verge of Nazism taking over our culture. But I do want to say the church can ill afford the luxury of cowering in fear because “the economy is better” or “we want to make America great again.” 

God has called us to a prophetic voice, not a political one. May we have the courage to use it.

16 June 2018

Musing in the Midst of Confusing Times



There is great danger in allowing our “observations about the truth” to become “the truth.” When I teach biblical interpretation every fall (and other times), when we get to the genre of prophetic literature, I always point out how poorly the biblical scholars of the day understood prophecy. In fact, they were so far from what God intended those words – Isaiah’s suffering servant songs, for example – to mean that their only alternative was to kill Jesus. 

This is, by the way, precisely the point of Jesus’ parable of the landowner in Matthew 21:33-46. Jesus aggressively says that they have missed the point of the prophets and are about the kill God’s Son. The final few verses of the text make it clear that the opponents of Jesus got the message loud and clear.

Two important issues led the “best of biblical scholarship of that day” to insist that Jesus had to go. One of those issues was something akin to what I once heard Fred Craddock call “concordance preaching.” They picked a verse here, another verse there, and pretty soon the picking and choosing routine gets put together in a way that means what they are speaking has nothing to do with Scripture.

Second, they made political alliances out of a thirst for power and protecting “place,” not seeking justice. In an incredibly ironic twist of plot lines, they are willing to get in bed with none other than Pontius Pilate, their closest Roman leader, in order to get rid of a Jesus who didn’t meet their ill-formed understanding of Messiah. And that ill-formed understanding of Messiah was rooted in the abuse of “the Law and the Prophets.” 

I’m not convinced we actually know a lot of truth – truth in the sense of ultimate, eternal truth. We do know a lot of Holy Spirit inspired observations about the truth and should use that kind of truth to help shape our lives. So far so good. But when we allow our own observations about ultimate truth to become “the truth” we journey down a road that might make us want to kill Jesus!

Let me illustrate. The Bible seems pretty clear in its truth claim that God made humans male and female. The whole binary creation story in Genesis makes it difficult to miss that kind of truth. More than one biblical author, and Jesus himself, will say that on the basis of that truth, marriage is one man, one woman, committed to each other for life. In our traditions as followers of Jesus in the United States, we typically go get a marriage license to make it legal and have a wedding in a church to make it spiritual.

In that one brief paragraph, three different kinds of truth are in play. Ultimate truth about humans made male and female; a Holy Spirit inspired observation about marriage, certainly true, but not ultimate; and a true statement about our traditions.

Where the problem arises is that it is so easy to let the third “true statement” become biblical doctrine that all must follow. For some, it is easy to suggest that the second “inspired truth” is ultimate truth and if you aren’t married, somehow you aren’t what God calls us all to be. (If that’s true by the way, the apostle Paul jumps off the deep end in places like 1 Corinthians 7.) 

It appears to me that a whole lot of what creates what I name above as “confusing times” is that we are doing exactly what the ancient Jewish leaders did with Jesus. We do a lot of concordance like pronouncements about what “the Christian worldview is” and we are far too quick to jump in bed with politicians – some on the right, some on the left. 

The result of such thinking – at least in part – is that we end up with such a mixed message about the gospel that no one much pays any attention these days. Here are some questions.
·         Can I be consistent with “the Truth” revealed by God in the person of Jesus of Nazareth and on the one hand travel to the state capital every year to protest abortion (which is “the law”) and on the other hand say ripping children from their parents is acceptable because “it’s the law?”

·         But I can also flip that question around. Can I be greatly concerned about children being ripped from their parents at the border on the one hand; but insist that abortion is a personal preference matter on the other?

·         Do we realize that the government Paul said believers should respect its role in Romans 13, also insisted that only Caesar was Lord. Do you really think Paul obeyed that Law? Or, have we misunderstood observations about the truth with the truth?

·         The Exodus story in the Old Testament is the story that seems to be the paradigm for the Jesus story in the New Testament. In Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy we see story after story of international boundaries, etc., being ignored. I’m not opposed to the idea of boundaries, etc., but honestly isn’t that a political and not theological issue? The God revealed in Scripture seems to be a bit of an “Exodus-kind-of-God.” How do we know that He hasn’t orchestrated this migration toward the US – in part because we haven’t gone to places where such needs exists?

·         Then there is that troublesome text from Matthew 25. You know, the one where Jesus does some separating at His glorious reappearing and the primary basis of the separating is “what we have done to the least of those among us.” Does that text have anything to say to our “confusing times?”

·         To get closer to home, if I’m outraged about abortion, or outraged about what is going on at the border right now – what should my attitude be about children in our culture whose lives are crushed under the heavy weight of things like hunger, poor parenting, random gun violence, drug abuse, sex trafficking, unwed pregnancies, bad schools, extraordinary incarceration rates, district attorneys who ensure re-election by over prosecution and fill our jails with people who could be productive outside, legislators who make laws but see themselves above the law, and . . . that list doesn’t seem to end?

There’s a remarkable line in Ephesians 3:1 that I think should prick the conscience of every person who seeks to follow Jesus. Here’s what it says, “For this reason I, Paul, the prisoner of Christ Jesus for the sake of you Gentiles . . . “ Paul, the former Jew, former “Pharisee of Pharisees,” former persecutor of the Church has been sitting in jail for what may be as long as four years. Why? “For the sake of you Gentiles.” For Paul, the Jesus story was far more important than personal preference, cultural traditions, and even previously erroneous understanding of Scripture. There is no better picture in Scripture of the transforming power of the gospel!

He preached “Christ, and Him crucified” in a culture and under a government that declared only Caesar is Lord. He not only went to jail – tradition says he eventually was beheaded for sticking to that story.

The only question for me – and I hope you – is: “For what are you willing to go to jail?” Or, perhaps, die?

07 June 2018

Don’t Make It What It’s Not


The heavens declare the glory of God,
and the sky above proclaims his handiwork.
(Psalm 19:1, ESV)

I just finished teaching a three-week intensive course at Point titled Scripture: How We Use It. It is a required course for students at Point if they are not biblical studies majors. We use a textbook in the course written by Ben Witherington III, Reading and Understanding the Bible. One of the important items Witherington addresses early on is that when we make the Bible something it isn’t, we do it nor God a favor.

One of my favorite psalms is Psalm 19. I read it often, think about it practically every day. The first stanza of the psalm (1-6) is focused on creation – its glory in proclaiming the glory of God’s  handiwork. The second stanza (7-11) is focused on the “law of the Lord” and the great value such Law has for God’s people. The psalm ends with these words – words many of us have memorized:

Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart
be acceptable in your sight,
O Lord, my rock and my redeemer.

It seems to me that when I put these two stanzas together – the testimony of creation and the testimony of God’s words -  I can truly petition God to let my words and thoughts be acceptable to Him. (As a side note, I would encourage you to spend more time outside in the midst of creation’s testimony while reading Scripture!)

Unfortunately, some would interpret words like those in verses 1-6 (and other places in Scripture where the world is described) in a way that makes the Bible something it isn’t. The Bible’s kind of naked-eye description of parts of the universe weren’t intended to be chapters in a modern science textbook – and when we make them that, we miss the point.

Psalm 19:1-6 isn’t giving a technical description of the place the sun occupies in the universe nor how it works. But, if we listen to David’s words, we see a Spirit-inspired interpretation of what the universe means! Apparently, regardless of the mechanics of how, God intends creation to be a voice that points to His glory. How many times a day do we see some part of this marvelous universe in ways that convince us of the greatness of our God?

God reminded Israel, through Isaiah the prophet that we humans don’t always think and behave like He does. (55:8-11) Thus we were given “His Word” so we could learn to think and behave as He does. It is that “Word” that often interprets creation for us. Not so much in terms of mechanics as in terms of God’s divine intention at creation.

My summer session students almost always seem like a little light bulb is going off in their still young brains. Use the Bible as it was intended to be used and it becomes this marvelous collection of words from God, given through a number of different humans He used to write them down, that can change life!

If that is going to happen in our lives, we have to learn not to make what it isn’t!