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Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Sermon: B Lent 2, February 28, 2021, "Taking up our cross to discern a path"

 B Lent 2 SJUCC 2021
Mark 8:31-38
February 28, 2021

 

Throughout this season of Lent, we voluntarily walk out into the stark and extreme landscape of the wilderness to develop our focus and clarity about who we are and who we are in relationship.  Because the wilderness can be a dangerous place, almost inhuman, with wild beasts and the like, we must discern what we will leave behind as unnecessary baggage and what will we take with us as important, valuable.  If we walk through this time intentionally, the wilderness hones our attention.  And what we give our attention to, grows. 

In the current age, we are consistently being inundated by the technologies that deliver to us our relationships with the outside world in current events, the interpretation of the news, fake news, and entertainment, and all the variations and combinations of these.  Our technologies also deliver to us our relationships with our far-flung families, friends, and our values in texts, tweets, and Facebook posts.   

I like the criticism found in movies like the zombie romantic comedy, “Warm Bodies,” which parodies modern society.  As the movie opens, we see a number of people walking around an airport, glued to their phones, their technology making them unavailable to the everyone and everything around them.  The movie asks, in effect, are we using our technology or is our technology using us?  Have we, in effect, become zombies?   . . . A little ironic to ask in the midst of Zoom worship.

The etymology of technology is found in words like “art,” “skill,” “craft,”, and “ingenuity.”  In effect, our technology is about “useful art.”  But as our technology becomes more and more strongly tied to our identity, the question, again,  is whether we are using our technology or whether our technology is using us?[1] Are we using and infusing our technology with our values or is our technology using and infusing us with other values?  Certainly, all the news about infiltration and manipulation of media platforms like Facebook and Twitter remind us that some systems and structures are banking on the fact that we can be controlled and used by our technologies.  What are we paying attention to?

In the passage from Mark we have before us today, Jesus says, “If anyone would come after me, or follow me, let them deny themselves, take up their cross, and follow me.”  That passage is probably either Jesus quoting Cynic philosophers who had come before him, Cynic philosophers who may have been his contemporaries; or the author of Mark placing a popular Cynic quote on the lips of Jesus.  Cynic philosophers were not negative in the way we use the word “cynical.”  Rather, Cynic philosophers were a-social and counter-cultural critics.  Many of them would beg and go unshaven and unbathed.   Some would go without clothes or belongings.  Cynics did all this to point out how ridiculous the striving after possessions and wealth was in Roman society.[2]  Not surprisingly, Roman society responded by referring to Cynics as “dogs.”

           Epictetus, a Cynic philosopher, was quoted in the 2nd Century as saying, “If you want to be crucified, just wait. The cross will come. If it seems reasonable to comply, and the circumstances are right, then it's to be carried through, and your integrity maintained.”[3]  Within Cynic schools of philosophy in the First century, suffering, sin, and death or, literally, carrying one’s cross for doing the right or virtuous thing, certified that person as full of integrity, authentic, a true philosopher.[4]  The Roman government maintained its dominance through horrendous, tortuous executions carried out through crucifixion.  The message of Rome was simple, “Submit or die.”  For a Cynic, to take up one’s cross was to live with integrity under authoritarian hypocrisy of Rome.

Many believe that the gospel of Mark was written around year 70 C.E., the time of the Jewish Great Revolt.  The historian Josephus believes that approximately 1.1 million Jews were killed by Rome during the Great Revolt, many of them crucified, Rome ringing the city of Jerusalem alone with tens of thousands of crosses.[5]  So when Mark includes admonitions to take up our cross and follow Christ, this is not metaphor or hyperbole.  These are real challenges to a costly discipleship, to recognize that to live out our values might be a test of our loyalties, even to the point of death.

           That was the original meaning of the Greek word we now translate as faith, pistis.  Pistis meant loyalty or allegiance.  In what basket do you put your eggs?  Historically, we have heard this passage translated as Jesus admonishing Peter, “Get thee behind me, Satan.”  But the better word for “Satan” is probably “Adversary”, the great tester of loyalties[6], the one who wants to know if you are a disciple of Christ or Caesar?  Are you a follower of the one who puts their eggs in the basket of the materially poor, the political prisoner, and the occupied?  Or are you a follower of the one who puts their eggs in the basket of the materially wealthy, the militarily powerful, and those who maintain peace through violence and death?  Are we setting our minds, our attention, on divine things or something else?

Cynic philosophers believed a life lived virtuously, with the expectation of struggle, rose above what the Romans could do to you with a cross.  The disciples of Christ defined that virtuous life in an even more radical path.  We, too often, interpret Jesus’s crucifixion as a singular experience when, in all reality, hearing the gospel story would have been a sign of solidarity that Christ too, like what you, your friends, and your family might have experienced, Christ too suffered that same fate.

Repeated by or put on the lips of Jesus, Jesus’ followers had to be aware that the path they had chosen was a hard path, a path full of struggle.  Suffering and hardship came to Jesus’s followers not just because life was hard, but also because a virtuous life, a life full of integrity put them square against a society maintained by violence and torture and death. 

Too often “take up your cross” has been interpreted in the common vernacular about having our own individual crosses to bear, a phrase we still use much too often, as in, “Poor Mike, how does he stand it when the Illini lose to Michigan State like that?  I guess that’s just his cross to bear.”  Rather, this verse is about entering into struggles and hardships which put us foursquare against systems of domination and destruction.   “If you take up your cross,” is about choices over and against a hopelessness that says the world can be any different.  Show your loyalty even in the shadow of the cross.

The radical call of this Scripture is made even more explicit when Jesus references the Human One[7] (not once but twice) or what has been traditionally translated as the Son of Man.  The Human One, in Jewish mythology, is seen coming with the Ancient-of-Days in the prophet Daniel’s dreams to institute, transform, and rehabilitate society in the values of justice.[8]  The Human One also opposes the evil and wicked empires, characterizing those empires as carnivorous beasts with their arrogance and long teeth, devouring and consuming, consuming and devouring.   Again, are we aligning ourselves with the project of the Human One or the carnivorous, violent, consuming, and arrogant beasts?

We must liberate our attention in this wilderness of Lent so that we have the tools to live this difficult, radical life, to maintain our loyalty when it would just be so easy to assent to the violence and death reasserted in Syria, now practiced in our schools, and furthered in extractive economies that devour the poor and our planet.  How shall we do this?  How do we use our technologies to inform our faith?

Kevin Kelley, the founder of Wired magazine and a self-identified Christian, has a fascination with the Amish and their practices.  The Amish are stereotyped as people who resist change and the wider culture by abandoning technology, electricity, and any sense of modern fashion.  But Kelley relates that the Amish are changing all the time.  They decide what useful art they are going to employ based on values and practices that inform their values.  According to Kelley, the Amish use discernment questions which reveal their values.  Those discernment questions are:  1) Will this technology increase or strengthen my family?  And 2) Will this technology increase or strengthen my community?  Kelley goes on to say:

 

So the Amish, their ideal is to have every meal with their children until they leave. They want to have breakfast, lunch, and dinner every day with their children. How much time does it bring them and keep them in the community? So the reason why they have horses instead of cars is because the horse can only go 15 miles away, so they have to go shopping, go to church, go to visit, all within 15 miles. That forces them to pay attention, to support their local neighborhood, their community. And so when they’re looking at new technology — like, they say, LEDs or whatever — does it help them do that, or does it not? So they’re not rejecting technology. They’re saying: We want technology that serves our purposes.

 

And the way that they do this is also interesting, is — they don’t think about the technologies. They have Amish early adopters. And these are guys, usually, in any community, who are eager to try new things. And they have to get permission from the bishop. And so the bishop will say, “OK, Ivan, yeah, you can have a cellphone in your truck for work.” And so, for the next year, they watch — his community watches Ivan to see how that affects his family, his community, his work, and if they don’t think that it’s a positive, then he has to give it up. So it’s a community decision.[9]

 

Does our useful art, our technology, reveal our loyalties, reflect what we want to grow?  Or do we end up reflecting the loyalties of or technology?

           Allied Media Projects is an organization based out of Detroit that is actively seeking to build a world based on transformative justice through intentional and strategic use of media technologies.  Their mission is to cultivate media strategies for a more just, creative and collaborative world. They serve a network of media makers, artists, educators, and technologists working for social justice.  Their definition of media includes all forms of communication, from videos and websites to theater, dance, design, and interactive technology.[10]  Hear in that mission statement values, not unlike the Amish, to be purposeful and intentional with their attention to technology.

           Here are some of the principles they have discerned in their work: 

·     We are making an honest attempt to solve the most significant problems of our day.

·     We are building a network of people and organizations that are developing long-term solutions based on the immediate confrontation of our most pressing problems.

·     Wherever there is a problem, there are already people acting on the problem in some fashion. Understanding those actions is the starting point for developing effective strategies to resolve the problem, so we focus on the solutions, not the problems.

·     We emphasize our own power and legitimacy.

·     We presume our power, not our powerlessness.

·     We spend more time building than attacking.

·     We focus on strategies rather than issues.

·     The strongest solutions happen through the process, not in a moment at the end of the process.

·     The most effective strategies for us are the ones that work in situations of scarce resources and intersecting systems of oppression because those solutions tend to be the most holistic and sustainable.

·     Place is important. Place helps define context.

·     We encourage people to engage with their whole selves, not just with one part of their identity.

And, finally, they list in bold: 

·     We begin by listening.[11]

Imagine a whole community of people who might take up those spiritual practices as a way of walking through the wilderness and honing their attention at a time of ever-changing technology.  I hear in those principles strongly spiritual content coming from a secular setting.  More and more, I hear a spiritual consensus emerging that recognizes we can no longer give our loyalty to the rules of Rome but must find something more just, more life-giving, more intentional, living with integrity even when it is difficult.  What of those principles might you take, individually, as a walking stick which measures your steps?  What of those principles might we take, as a faith community, to sharpen our attention, to continue piecing together our downtown neighbors and citizens, and living our lives in loyalty to the things of God and not of Caesar?  I think Allied Media Projects has it right.  We begin by listening.  May it be so.  Amen. 



[1] “The universe is a question:  interview with Kevin Kelly,” OnBeing with Krista Tippett, January 18, 2018.  https://onbeing.org/programs/kevin-kelly-the-universe-is-a-question-jan2018/.

[2] F. Gerald Downing advances the comparisons between Jesus and the Cynics more than anyone.  The Jesus Seminar has used much of his material to draw comparisons.

[3] “Historical Commentary on the Gospel of Mark,” http://users2.ev1.net/~turton/GMark/GMark08.html, citing Robert Price, Deconstructing Jesus (Amherst, New York:  Prometheus, 2000), p. 160.

[4] Ibid, citing David, Seeley,  Blessings and Boundaries:Interpretations of Jesus' Death in Q. In Early Christianity, Q and Jesus,” Semeia 55 (ed. John S. Kloppenborg; Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1991), pp. 131-46. 

[5] James Carroll, Christ Actually:  The Son of God for the Secular Age (New York:  Viking, 2014), pp. 46-54.

[6] Bruce J. Malina and Richard J. Rohrbaugh, Social Science Commentary on the Synoptic Gospels (Fortress Press:  Minneapolis, 2014), p. 182, n. Honor; Secrecy.

[7] Literally, “The One of Fertile Soil” or, as I translate it, “Child of Earth.”

[8] The Bible references this as tzedakah (righteousness)

[9] “The universe is a question.”

[10] https://www.alliedmedia.org/about/story

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