Earth Day

Tuesday, April 21, 2020

Second Sunday of Easter, "Stop breathing on me!" April 19, 2020


A Easter 2 BFC 2020
John 20:19-23
April 19, 2020

            In an April 3rd article in Financial Times, one of my spiritual directors from afar, a great truth-teller, the Indian author, Arundhati Roy, writes about how we will never be able to use words like “going viral” again without a pause or shudder,  with now over a million people infected, over 50,000 dead.   She worries about her own country as the leader of India, Narendra Modi, parrots other world leaders by strictly enforcing social distancing, not recognizing that, social distancing applied without imagination in India, this means packing people together, almost certain to lead to untold suffering and death in that country. 
           Roy writes that the leaders who are managing this pandemic are openly referring to it as a war.  “But if it really were a war, then who would be better prepared than the US?  If it were not masks and gloves that its frontline soldiers needed, but guns, smart bombs, bunker busters, submarines, fighter jets and nuclear bombs, would there be a shortage?”[1]  We were not prepared for care and healing.  All the time we have been preparing for, giving away our loyalty to, giving our hearts over to violence and war.  We don’t even have the words for care and healing.
           I messaged Tracy a couple days ago that I didn’t know a time in my almost 60 years of life when the world has felt so frighteningly fragile.  Yet, that seems very privileged of me, so unbelievably narcissistic in a world where some people before the pandemic had to worry about their sons wearing a hoodie, others had to worry that their daughters might go missing, in other countries whole communities might get disappeared, and knowing that, unless we change,                   the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s conservative estimates that we have 10 years before we are headed for continuing climate catastrophes.[2]
           I know that is a bummer . . . and a downer.  Who really wants to come to Zoom worship and hear the pastor roll out that kind of dour forecast?   But here is my concern.  If I don’t share that Good Friday awareness, I am not sure we get what resurrection stories, like the one we have before us, must have meant for the early Christian movement, known as The Way. 
In today’s story, the disciples are social distancing out of real fear for their own lives.  These rural, backwater Galileeans know that to be seen in the local Jerusalem marketplace or on the city streets might cost them their lives, might end up with more crucifixions.   We should remember that the crucifixions of the Jewish people do not end because Jesus is resurrected.  Appearances of the Risen Christ, as the story goes, happened before we find the disciples hiding from the city authorities.  The question remaining for the disciples, locked away and social distancing in an upper room, is, does anything of Jesus’s life and ministry mean squat in light of crucifixion?  Or does the imperial violence and narcissism, the lack of bandwidth found among the Jerusalem city officials, mean that the movement dies with the leader of the movement . . . that the movement dies when setbacks, violence, obstacles, trauma, and threats  come to a people?
What the Scriptural story tells us is that Jesus comes to the disciples and stands square in the midst of them, addresses them in the plural, as a community, and assuages their fear.  Peace, he gives them, not as the Domination System gives—through military might, power over, and economic leverage—but in a way that continues to midwife community.  Jesus does all this in a way that is spiritually embodied. 
Biblical scholar Ched Myers reminds us that, as Christians, we live in a spiritually embodied tradition.  This is not a ghostly tradition.  Myers writes, in embodied form, he is the “Executed One, Beat-up One, Famished One, Refusing-to-be-Dead One.”[3]  Sanitizing these texts is only available to the privileged.  Those who are not so privileged know that Good Friday happened and happens.  The wounds are still there, the blows and strikes are still evident.  But the Risen Christ is there to remind them that the work they did, the mission they were on, it transcends all of that.  It’s bigger and must continue. 
The value the Risen Christ asks for here is a derivative of the Greek verb, pistis.  Pistis has traditionally been too often translated as “to believe”—a word that connotes intellectual assent or idea.  In the Bible, it has even been stretched to believing the unbelievable.  Like, “I believe the tooth fairy is real!  See my quarter?” 
Recognizing that early gospel writers were aware of the imperial cult and the Caesar-religion, they would have also known that Caesar Augustus had rejuvenated loyalty or faithfulness as a primary Roman value using the word pistis.[4]  For Rome that verb was much stronger in connotation than intellectual assent.  Pistis meant loyalty, faithfulness, or what Strong’s biblical concordance translates it as, “moral conviction.”[5]  As Lisa read in the introduction to the Scripture, I translated it as, “what we give our heart to.”  With its repeated usage in this resurrection story, the word would ring in First Century ears where people are being asked to give their loyalty to Caesar in small, everyday ways and in large, Roman centurion ways.  Listeners of this story are hearing the story and being confronted with where their loyalty or allegiance lies—with Caesar or with Christ?  If you choose not to be loyal to Caesar, in the First Century, it could mean the decimation of your community or the crucifixion of you and your family.  “Belief” does not capture this loyalty test. 
In this time, in this day, with an authoritarian despot who considers loyalty to be his primary value, how can we not hear this passage as a direct challenge to his way, his path, his rule?  If you are not loyal, maybe you don’t get enough ventilators for your state or your community. 
As Jesus sends the disciples out into the world with a countercultural allegiance, the story borrows from the first creation story in Genesis.  In that creation story, God breathes into the fertile topsoil, breathes into nostrils to animate life.  Humankind comes into being.  God’s inspiration becomes humankind’s respiration.  Repeating the Genesis story, Jesus re-animates the community movement and sends them back out into the Domination System, full well knowing that violence, authoritarianism, and class warfare will continue to be a part of the wider narrative.  You must continue to be different.  You must continue to speak another language.  The community comes back into being.  Divine inspiration becomes community respiration. 
           Three of the gospel writers have resurrection stories.  All of the gospel writers either imply or state plainly that if the resurrection is to be a reality it must be because the community of Christ continues the work begun by Jesus and his community.  In other words, the gospel writers all indicate that the resurrection only happens if Christ’s community continues the ministry.[6]
The Risen Christ re-creates the disciples by breathing on them a holy spirit.  He then gives the disciples, often representing the divergent churches or traditions within the gospels, the power to determine what will be considered sinful and what will not, what will be forgiven and what will be not, who will be in and who will be out.  In this way, the author of John suggests that what the disciples, what the divergent churches decide on earth will be the divine decision.   
The author of John offers an incredible freedom to the early church.  The author of John offers an incredible responsibility to the early church.  Whatever you decide, it shall be so.  The early church is charged with an awesome responsible freedom to discern how God shall be still speaking, how the Risen Christ shall still act.
We are also charged with that awesome responsible freedom.  The world needs to hear God speaking through us as Billings First Congregational Church—not as divergent individuals, but what we have decided as a community collectively.  If we are not able to share what God is speaking in this day and age, we know other church communities who will tell us what God has to say.  We may laugh at them or chide them for assuming that they can speak with clarity and confidence about what God is saying, but how would anyone assume that God has to say anything any different—about who is sinful and who is not, about who is forgiven and who is not, and about who is in and who is out?  How would anyone assume that God has anything different to say if other-hearted people of faith have nothing to say?  If we cannot get together and decide what our baseline is, what our core values are, how do we would expect large issues like world peace to be brokered, racism to be healed, or that national male leaders might step back so that women might have basic rights like equal pay for equal work?   This congregation is a manifestation of the Divine seeking to re-animate community and what God would will and want for the wider world.
Collective discernment is hard work.  To be responsible in this freedom God gives a very divergent people, we would have to sit down at the dialogue table, use the language of faith, and show a willingness to share how God is speaking to us and be willing to hear how God is speaking to others. 
The world so needs to hear the voice of Christians who love this good earth, who cherish its peoples and animals, and who hold values in keeping with deep values in our tradition of justice, compassion, hospitality, solidarity, and protest.  The Risen Christ moves into our upper rooms, where we have been locked in fear, pronounces peace, and breathes on us—this group of divergent disciples.  Today let us be re-created for the way God is still speaking in the world.   The violence, domination, and inequity in our wider world do not mean the movement dies.   It means that our work will be often difficult and challenging.  Where will our loyalties lie?
As the Divine blows through our community, we are called to speak another language.   Crucifixions of the First Century reminded people that the world could not continue with the same loyalties and allegiances, that world transformation was necessary.  Arundhati Roy writes of the current pandemic we are living as a portal to something else. 

Whatever it is, coronavirus has made the mighty kneel and brought the world to a halt like nothing else could. Our minds are still racing back and forth, longing for a return to “normality”, trying to stitch our future to our past and refusing to acknowledge the rupture. But the rupture exists. And in the midst of this terrible despair, it offers us a chance to rethink the doomsday machine we have built for ourselves. Nothing could be worse than a return to normality. Historically, pandemics have forced humans to break with the past and imagine their world anew. This one is no different.
It is a portal, a gateway between one world and the next. We can choose to walk through it, dragging the carcasses of our prejudice and hatred, our avarice, our data banks and dead ideas, our dead rivers and smoky skies behind us. Or we can walk through lightly, with little luggage, ready to imagine another world. And ready to fight for it.[7]

In each age, we must be willing to acknowledge the immense suffering and death, violence, domination, and inequity that occur.  As people of faith, however, our story tells us that the Risen Christ stands in our midst again and again, to let us know that these death-givers do not have the final word.  Breathe deeply.  The pandemic is a portal.  Christ is once again re-animating us to other loyalties, another language, ready to imagine another world.  He is sending us out into the world ready to struggle for the peace, not as the Domination System gives, but as he gives.  Let it be so among us.  Amen. 


[1] Arundhati Roy, “The pandemic is a portal,” Financial Times, April 3, 2020, https://www.ft.com/content/10d8f5e8-74eb-11ea-95fe-fcd274e920ca.
[2] Jonathan Watts, “We have 12 years to limit climate change catastrophe, warns UN,” The Guardian, March 8, 2018.  https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/oct/08/global-warming-must-not-exceed-15c-warns-landmark-un-report. 
[3] Ched Myers, “Four Brief Meditations on the Way to Easter – Part IV. Easter Sunday: The Somatic Traumatic and Pandemic Lockdown,” chedmyers.org, April 14, 2020, https://chedmyers.org/tag/bible-study/.
[4] Focus of the book by Matthew Bates, Salvation by Allegiance Alone: Rethinking Faith, Works, and the Gospel of Jesus the King (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 2016); detailed by Richard Horsley, Paul and Empire: Religion and Power in Roman Imperial Society (New York:  Bloomsbury Academic, 1997),  pp. 149ff
[6] Brian P. Stoffregen, Exegetical Notes at CrossMarks, http://www.crossmarks.com/brian/john20x19e2.htm
[7] Arundhati Roy, “The pandemic is a portal,” Financial Times, April 3, 2020, https://www.ft.com/content/10d8f5e8-74eb-11ea-95fe-fcd274e920ca.

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