Earth Day

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Twenty-fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time, "The Four Horsemen," September 22, 2019


C Revelation 2 BFC 2019
Revelation 6:1-8
September 22, 2019

          It is that time of year again!  It is the time of year when I go through the seasonal ritual of dashed hopes and impossible dreams of the University of Illinois college football team going through the season undefeated . . . Ok, maybe to a bowl game?  Or playing .500 ball?  Maybe winning one or two Big Ten games?  How about just beating the lowly Eastern Michigan Eagles?  Or hold Nebraska under 700 total yards?  No.  Drat.  The dollars and pageantry poured into college football recognize a long history of mythology created to make it a nation-wide phenomenon. 
Early 20th Century sportswriter, Grantland Rice, had a way of writing which elevated sports to something beyond the everyday, ordinary, and mundane.  In the 1920s, Grantland Rice wrote about the Notre Dame backfield, under famed coach Knute Rockne, as the four horsemen of the apocalypse.  Today they sound like your State Farm insurance agent:  Harry Stuhldreher, Don Miller, Jim Crowley, and Elmer Layden.[1]  Most of these guys weighed less than 160 pounds.  I may not be as fast as these guys, but I bet I could still take Elmer Layden? dowwwwwwn!  Four horsemen!?  Pfffft.
          That is the purpose of mythological, particularly apocalyptic, storytelling.  Whether Grantland Rice or John of Patmos in the book of Revelation, use of the apocalyptic is to elevate the stakes, make something bigger than life so that we recognize deeper meaning or something more than the everyday, ordinary, or mundane.  For John of Patmos, it was about helping Christians of his day see a crisis unfolding such that they would move to non-cooperation with the Roman Empire, to speak out in a way that might very well create suffering for them, and to recognize that they were part of a long line of faithful ancestors who would work to bring God’s shalom to all of creation. 
Throughout history, those who espouse hate and violence to the most vulnerable have done so in a way that de-humanizes or belittles, calling them “rats or cockroaches”, “animals or savages”, “murders or rapists” and continues the imagery by herding people into cattle cars, boarding schools, or detention centers.  In so doing, we deny our connection and justify our humanity by declaring some as less than human. 
Lisa and I remarked about the three people who made incredible statements on Facebook about the immigration and refugee forum being offered this Friday.  One even carried her objection over to Lisa’s weekly offering of communi-tea with Lisa responding in such a beautiful and elegant way that no response followed.  I was less charitable.  When another person asked what I was doing about the persecution of Christians in China, I tried to be kind in my first go-round, but after being accused of carrying a political football, I responded by saying, “It sounds like you don’t care about the persecution of Christians at our border?”  Yeah, I don’t think it occurred to them that the people at the border might have a faith.  Take that.  Put that in your pipe and smoke it.  Triple snap. 
(scolding myself) You are a pastor, Mike.  A pastor.  Deep breathing.
What Jewish and Christian writers have historically done in response to unjust and dehumanizing words and actions aimed at vulnerable populations is to help the faithful see the principalities and powers, the systems and structures as the true monsters, hybrid wild beasts, animals with excesses in things like teeth (representing appetite) or horns (representing power).[2]  John has these mythological figures doing horrifically graphic things, like drinking the blood of the martyrs, so that the faithful do not accommodate to or get used to their everyday, ordinary, and mundane violence.  If the images John uses scare us or cause revulsion, John might say, “Yeah, you get it then!  Wake up!  Don’t try to pretend this anything less than horrifying!”
The root of the word “monster” is “a sign, to show, or to warn.”  And John is revealing these terrible monsters as a way of warning the faithful of the ordinary violence, regularly perpetrated by the conquering empire.  Don’t be co-opted, don’t accommodate, don’t cooperate, don’t pretend their sly and subtle invitations to be like them or to aspire to be them are innocuous or without the destruction of others.
John conveys that there is something deeper than the everyday, ordinary, and mundane world you experience, something more real.  As it is with the four seals in Revelation that are opened, opened as if to give entrance to the soul[3], the cosmic order broken open to the chaos that now ensues.  The first rider that emerges with the breaking open of the first seal is conquering Rome in all of its imperial glory on a white horse.   White is symbolic of victory and that was a primary mission statement of Roman imperialism: “Peace through military victory.  The Roman mantra was “RELIGION, WAR, VICTORY, PEACE.”[4]  Rome conquers and conquers and conquers ever more.[5]
Just to emphasize, when the second seal is opened, the chaos emerging is a bright red horse.  On that horse is a rider who comes with a sword to take peace from the earth so that the people would slaughter one another.  This is a countercultural statement over and against Rome’s claim that it brought peace to the earth.  “(F)rom the point of view of those who were exploited by the Empire and opposed it, this was not real peace.  It was an imposed peace.”[6]  All of this is to emphasize Jewish thought, story, mythology, and values.  Violence is the original sin.  Rome is rife with it.  John’s monsters are calling forward not only chaos but unmasking and revealing Rome as run through with this sin.  John is interpreting a narrative to charge Christians in Asia Minor with a necessary spiritual exodus from Roman cooperation and accommodation. 
The third seal is opened and coming forth is the black horse, black a symbol of economic misfortune.  The rider of the black horse, holding scales in his hands, makes us aware that this is about economic injustice.  There is a severe shortage of the staples, the essential food, the wheat and barley.  But the luxury items like olive oil and wine, now those are protected.  “Do not damage the olive oil and wine!” it is declared.  The monstrous, inhuman, and violent are shot through all representations. 
Finally, the fourth seal is opened and the fourth horse is called forth.  Death and Hades come with them and the horse is a pale green color.  They are given authority of one-quarter of the earth to kill with the sword, famine, pestilence, and by the wild animals—all signs that the earth has been overrun. The Greek word used to describe the color of this horse is also the one used for grass and other vegetation.[7]  The ever-more conquering in war, the widespread violence against the vulnerable, and the economic exploitation leads to ecological catastrophe, death and hell now loosed upon the earth.   The fourth horse and rider are pictured as ecological devastation. 
All seems graphically and tragically hopeless, right?  Revelation is filled with such gross images, vivid bloodletting, and horrific mythology that we would want to turn our head away.  For many of us living in middle class America, we would rather that the decision had been that Revelation not be included in the Bible.  But I am reminded of a quote I repeat over and over again to explain the Bible from English author, G.K. Chesterton, “Fairy tales do not tell children the dragons exist. Children already know that dragons exist. Fairy tales tell children the dragons can be killed.”[8]  
John wants his readers and listeners to know that evil is real, results in real consequences for the earth and all of its inhabitants, particularly the most vulnerable.  John is pleading with the faithful not to go along just to get along, only to avoid their own persecution.  Do not harbor evil because you are safe.  Do not participate in it.  Do not collaborate, conspire, or contribute to it.  Do not partner with that evil which defined unfaithfulness from the very beginning of the Jewish.  John the prophet knows it leads to ruin, and is not in keeping with God and Christ.  Evil is real and evil abounds.
I will admit that Revelation frightens the heck out of me because I wonder how much I have collaborated, conspired, and contributed to the war, violence, economic exploitation, and ecological catastrophe which seems to be the death march my country is on regardless of party. 
I think Creator could care a whit about my prolific Facebook sparring ability.  If there is a God, if there is a deeper story, I know my commitment to the care and relationship with our earth does not compare with the historical resistance of Native and indigenous peoples, does not hold a candle to the 16 year-old Swedish activist, Greta Thurnberg, who asks, matter-of-factly, why she would go to school on Fridays, instead of protesting, when the adults won’t listen to the science taught at school, when present policies and practices leave her no hope for the future. 
We would all like to believe we are not collaborators with evil.  That kind of self-inventory sounds like too much of old-time religion.  But Wendell Berry, the poet-farmer from Kentucky, asks me tough questions.  He writes:

How much poison are you willing
to eat for the success of the free
market and global trade? Please
name your preferred poisons.

For the sake of goodness, how much
evil are you willing to do?
Fill in the following blanks
with the names of your favorite
evils and acts of hatred.

What sacrifices are you prepared
to make for culture and civilization?
Please list the monuments, shrines,
and works of art you would
most willingly destroy

In the name of patriotism and
the flag, how much of our beloved
land are you willing to desecrate?
List in the following spaces
the mountains, rivers, towns, farms
you could most readily do without.

State briefly the ideas, ideals, or hopes,
the energy sources, the kinds of security;
for which you would kill a child.
Name, please, the children whom
you would be willing to kill.[9]

          Those are hard questions—not questions I want to answer.  I might have to change my life!  Not unlike John of Patmos, Wendell Berry wants me to wake up and calls me to a deeper faithfulness.  Like a questionnaire on a job application, Berry unmasks my everyday, ordinary, and mundane cooperation with evil.  But . . . it is too much.  Take Revelation out of the Bible and Berry away from me.
          All this next week, Montana Interfaith Network and Billings Sanctuary Rising and the leadership of this congregation have events which offer us an opportunity to live more faithfully and to come out to be part of movements that say we will resist the four horsemen and their plans for war, violence, economic exploitation, and ecological catastrophe.  As people of faith, we are not promised ease but we are promised deep meaning.  Evil is real and evil abounds.  But the book of Revelation reminds us that dragons . . . and the four horsemen . . . can be beaten. 
          God is at work . . . deeper . . . from underneath.  Let us join Creator and collaborate in the coming of the saints, our beautiful ancestors, who have stitched and woven together a world which is waiting for us, a city that requires us to be awake with eyes to see it.   Amen. 


[1] Grantland Rice,”The Four Horsemen,” Sports Illustrated, October 31, 1955.
[2] Heather MaCumber, “A Monster Without a Name:  Creating the Beast Known As Antiochus IV in Daniel 7,” Journal of Hebrew Scriptures.  Volume 15, Article 9 DOI:10.5508/jhs.2015.v15.a9, pp. 2-5.  In his book, Philosophy of Horror, Noel Carroll shared the characteristics of the hybrid monster we see in Dracula or Frankenstein:  1) Must be a dangerous or threatening entity to one’s person or society at large; 2) Impure beings crossing normative categories by fusing disparate characteristics (zombie-living and dead; werewolf-human and animal) 3) Originate on the periphery of society or known world and considered other or alien to the society they infiltrate. 4) Emotions aroused by audience create fear in community with hope that restoration of cosmic order will be restored.
[3] “455: ἀνοίγω,” Thayer’s Greek Lexicon, https://biblehub.com/greek/455.htm. 
[4] John Dominic Crossan, “Peace through victory,” The Challenge of Jesus, https://faithandreason.org/images/uploads/COJ_Participants.pdf. 
[5] One of Richard Horsley’s critiques of early Christianity is that Christianity borrows the language of empire to critique empire.  So when we sing at Easter, “Thine is the glory, ever-conquering Son!” we impute the values of Rome to Jesus and pave the way for Christendom’s ever-conquering empire. 
[6] David J. Hawkin, “Globalization, the American Empire, and the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse,” Churchman, Winter 2014, pp. 320-321.
[7] David E. Aune, (Word Biblical Commentary) Vol. 52b: Revelation 6-16 (Dallas, Texas: Word Book Publishers, 1998), p. 400.
[8] GK Chesterton, Tremendous Trifles (London:  Pantiano’s Classics, 1909)
[9] Wendell Berry, “Questionaire,” Leavings (Berkley, CA:  2010), p. 14.

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