STH Community
Worship
Wednesday 28
November 2007
Celebration of Christ the King
Do
you have a puny Jesus?
When
I ask this, I am not so much concerned about the height of your Jesus. Jesus lived in a time when the stature of
human males was somewhat diminutive in comparison with present
demographics. If you believe the Shroud
of Turin, Jesus was about 5 foot 7 inches.
Here at Marsh Chapel we have three Jesuses, one in the rear stained
glass window, one in the altarpiece and one in the Rose window. I think the one in the rose window is
probably the tallest although he is seated so it is somewhat hard to judge. The moral of this story is that if you find
the height of your Jesus to be a topic of existential concern for you, you can
see Dean Hill and I’m sure he would be more than happy to loan you one of
ours. Just be sure to have filled out
your pledge card.
I,
for one, am not particularly concerned about Jesus’ height but about Jesus’
depth. I am concerned, on this
celebration of Christ the King, that perhaps our Jesus has become puny and
shallow. So I ask again, do you have a
puny Jesus?
The
Lord be with you.
And also with
you.
Let
us pray.
Sovereign
God, ruler of creation,
we
come before your throne
in
meekness before the mystery of your majesty.
We
pray you send your Spirit, the holy comforter,
to
enlighten our hearts and minds
in
the glory and power of your Son, Christ the King.
May
the words that we speak and the meditations we offer
be
a prayer of sweet smelling incense before you,
who
reigns with your Son Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit,
now
and for ever and unto ages of ages. Amen.
There
are two ways in which we make Jesus puny.
First,
we make Jesus puny when Jesus becomes for us merely Christ the King.
The
soldiers hanging out near the cross certainly saw Jesus as merely Christ the
King. They placed the sign that read
“This is the King of the Jews” on the cross and then demanded of Jesus that he
save himself. They had a view of
kingship based on the Roman imperial model.
The idea that Jesus, if indeed he was a king, was also God would not
have been strange to them who worshipped the emperor as a god. But, if indeed he was a king, and thus a god,
he should have been able to get himself down from the cross. And yet, there he hung. Apparently, Jesus was not merely a king, or
even a king, let alone a god, at least according to their test.
The
people standing by, who mere days earlier hailed Jesus’ triumphal entry into
Jerusalem as the coming of the king who would redeem Israel, now demanded the
same sign from Jesus to prove that he was Messiah, the anointed one, the
king. Get yourself down from the cross! Save yourself as you saved others! Bah! How
dare you call yourself a king!
The
first thief had more hope. Of course, he
had more at stake. Please Jesus, be the
Messiah, the king, because if you are king you can save yourself and me!
Either/or;
one or the other; all or nothing. Jesus
hung on a cross between two thieves, reduced to the dichotomy of king or
bandit.
In
our day kingship is not the reduction we most frequently hear demanded of
Jesus. Much more frequent is the image
of Jesus as savior. If you pray the
right prayer and assent to the right beliefs Jesus will save you from your
sins. Other times it is Jesus the
healer. If you only pray hard enough,
Jesus will heal you or your loved one.
Of course, all too frequently, Jesus fails the test. Some of the most sinful people in our society
are also the most convinced that they are saved, and the recovery of our loved
ones is equally likely predicted by the flip of a coin as by the intensity of
our prayer.
But
even when it works, even when lives are changed by commitment to an ideal of goodness,
courage, and righteousness and when people are healed from their diseases,
conditions and infirmities, still Jesus is impoverished. Jesus becomes uni-dimensional. Jesus is king. Jesus is savior. Jesus is healer. Either/or; one or the other; all or nothing.
What
happened to the expansive vision of Jesus advocated by the author of the letter
to the Colossians? Image of the
invisible God! Firstborn of all
creation! Creator of all things in
heaven and on earth. Creator of all
things visible and invisible. The one
before all things who holds them all together.
Head of the church. Firstborn
from the dead! Dwelling place of
God!
Where
is this Jesus who is before, above, below, beyond? Such a Jesus certainly cannot be stuffed
wholly or even partly into a single image or symbol. Such a Jesus cannot be reduced to
either/or. Such a Jesus defies one or
the other and transcends all and
nothing.
Do
you have a puny Jesus? Or does your
Jesus burst the bonds of narrow categories and images? Does your Jesus fit neat and tidy in a
carry-out box to be toted home and conveniently stored in the refrigerator
until he is convenient for consumption?
Or does your Jesus demand a rich panoply of overlapping and interrelated
symbols that impinge upon your every thought, belief and action merely to be
present to you in the various ways relevant to your existential situation but
still and beyond the needle-eye scope of your imagination? Is Jesus merely Christ the King, savior from
sin and healer of infirmities, or is Jesus also Lamb of God, the Cosmic Christ,
Prince of Peace, Lord of Lords, second person of the Trinity, historical
figure, liberator, judge, prophet, priest, bread, wine, water, oil, soldier,
sage, saint, black, white, brown, yellow, red, male, female, gay, straight,
tall, short, broken, whole, lover, enemy, master, servant, stranger, friend?
Do
you have a puny Jesus?
Second,
we make Jesus puny when Jesus is stripped
of his kingship entirely.
Kingship
was an important symbol for ancient Israelite religion. Our reading from Jeremiah points to this
first in reference to David, the quintessential image of the ideal King for
Israel. Jeremiah then goes on to draw a
line from David through the present and projects it on into the future when a
new king, a “righteous Branch,” will be raised up. The suggestion that this king will “deal
wisely” is a reminder of Solomon, the penultimate expression of Israelite
kingship, or the ultimate depending on whether you are reading Chronicles or
the Samuel/Kings narrative. The reading
appears in the lections for Christ the King Sunday as we Christians have a
penchant for reading Jesus back into the prophetic tradition.
The
symbolism of kingship is also a frustrating one for the Israelites,
however. Not that they hadn’t been
warned! All the way back in First
Samuel, God declared:
‘These
will be the ways of the king who will reign over you: he will take your sons
and appoint them to his chariots and to be his horsemen, and to run before his
chariots; and he will appoint for himself commanders of thousands and
commanders of fifties, and some to plough his ground and to reap his harvest,
and to make his implements of war and the equipment of his chariots. He will
take your daughters to be perfumers and cooks and bakers. He will take the best
of your fields and vineyards and olive orchards and give them to his courtiers.
He will take one-tenth of your grain and of your vineyards and give it to his
officers and his courtiers. He will take your male and female slaves, and the
best of your cattle and donkeys, and put them to his work. He will take
one-tenth of your flocks, and you shall be his slaves. And in that day you will
cry out because of your king, whom you have chosen for yourselves; but the Lord
will not answer you in that day.’
They
had indeed been warned, and yet were somehow surprised when it turned out
exactly as God said it would! The Book
of Kings is a rehearsal of the kingly reign over Israel, many of the depictions
including the line, “He did what was evil in the sight of the Lord, just as his
ancestors had done.”
In
the prophetic tradition, kingship has been transformed, as terms are wont to
do. Terminology – theological,
liturgical, scriptural, and ordinary – is transformed as it is specified to particular
contexts and then transposed, along with its specified meaning, into other
contexts. In the new context, the
meaning of the term must expand to encompass the new situation along with the
old, but also leaving something of the old behind. Over time, such as the period from the end of
the kingly rule to the rise of the prophetic tradition in the context of exile,
terms are adapted for present use, even as they seek to carry over the best of
their prior meaning. Such an historical
link is important for the value of the new meaning of the term, even if the
history carried forward is only partially representative of the facts of the
past. Jeremiah looks back at David and
Solomon, the progenitors of kingly rule in Israel, and highlights their qualities
of wisdom, justice and righteousness, overlooking their indiscretions and minor
transgressions. Just as Jeremiah
overlooked the indiscretions of his primal leading figures in the face of
national travesty and destruction, so too we may overlook the indiscretions of
our not-too-distant leaders for hope and courage in the face of economic
recession and humiliating moral collapse.
The
importance of kingship for Israelite religion is not justification in itself
for keeping the symbol in contemporary practice. Symbols can be, and sometimes are, excised
from traditions. We no longer live in a
medieval feudal society, and so it may be that the image of the king is one
that is up for such erasure. More
frequently, however, symbols are transformed from the context in which they
were initially introduced to have altered meanings such that the value of the
symbol is carried over. Such is the case
with the very feast we celebrate today.
The feast of Christ the King was instituted in 1925 by the papal
encyclical Quas Primas as a means of
combating the virulent –isms of its
day – communism, Marxism, fascism, and above all secularism. The encyclical announces a kingdom not of
this world. “It demands of its subjects
a spirit of detachment from riches and earthly things, and a spirit of
gentleness. They must hunger and thirst after justice, and more than this, they
must deny themselves and carry the cross.”
Doubtless, however, is the fact that such a kingdom will indeed have an
impact in mortal, finite, temporal life.
Of
course, the carryover of value in the symbol from the past along with the
finite creation of value for the symbol in the present inevitably brings with
it unintended referents. Kingship
derives from an inherently masculine word and so risks the continued exclusion
of women. Kingship implies the
unrestricted ability to exercise power and so invokes the very reasons
democracy has developed as the hallmark of modern western civilization. Kingship, looking all the way back to First
Samuel, risks oppression and enslavement, which would be a crushing blow to the
achievements of freedom and universal human rights.
What
then are we to do with kingship? Some,
no doubt, would advocate its erasure.
But eliminating a symbol is not so easy.
Symbols are the bearers of meaning and value in religions and in all
aspects of our lives. They should not be
cast aside without great care and consideration. To do so risks throwing out the baby with the
bathwater, a cliché with perhaps greater resonance as we look toward Advent and
Christmas. And we should give our
symbols a second look, a second glance, a second chance given their propensity
for transformation. You never know, it
may just turn out to be ourselves who are transformed.
Do
you have a puny Jesus? Or is your Jesus
so deep that no symbol alone is large enough to contain him and even a plethora
of symbols are only able to mediate him in the relevant respects? Are you willing to risk an engagement with
your creator, the one who gives you life, love, hope and courage, the very
ground of your being, with all of the attendant baggage of unintended
consequences?
Christ
is the king who hangs upon the cross and does not save himself, and so
reconciles all things to God. Hosanna to
the son of David. Blessed is the one who
comes in the name of the Lord. Amen.
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