Saturday, April 19, 2014

Holy, Forgiven




Psalm 32; John 20:1-10
Easter 2014

            With great humility, love and joy I have wonderfully good news to share with you all this morning.   It’s the good news of why we are faithfully gathered this hour.  It’s the good news that forever forms and reforms us as Christians.   It is quite simply, yet also profoundly, this – in Jesus Christ you are wholly forgiven!
               You are totally and completely forgiven of the sin you spiritually inherited as part of the human race.   You are forgiven for worshipping false gods, for living in self-righteousness, for failing to daily demonstrate what you faithfully profess.    You are forgiven of that which you feel convinced you can never forgive about yourself or about another person.   Every aspect of sin’s rebellious influence on your heart and mind and unique soul has been ultimately covered and conquered by the amazing grace and endless love of God in Jesus Christ.   You are wholly forgiven, and thus, you are called upon to live a holier life after the example of our Lord.
            This blessed gift of forgiveness did not at all come about according to our understanding of “fair play.”   We can thank Shakespeare for first putting the words “fair” and “play” together in print.   It was used to convey a courteous rapport between opponents in a confrontation.   It went on to influence the rules of conduct expected of Medieval Knights.  They were, for example, never to attack an unarmed enemy or the weak and innocent.   
            It suffices to say that what the powers of the Roman Empire and the Jewish Temple did together to Jesus of Nazareth was not fair play.   He had not led an armed rebellion.   He had fulfilled, not forsaken, the ancient laws of Israel.   Yet he was arrested and did not get any kind of fair trial.   And adding insult to injury, what his closest disciples did at the end of Jesus’ life was also not fair play.   They denied ever knowing him and thus sold out his message of God’s kingdom come on earth as it is in heaven.   The absence of fair play led to Jesus being arrested, flogged, mocked and crucified. 
            Had you been there when they crucified our Lord, wouldn’t you have expected Him to have decried this grave injustice from the Cross?  To openly lament, dare I even say “preach” about how unfairly he’d been treated?  Don’t we all do this when we are even slightly wronged?   
            Yet there is no written record of such words.   Instead, heard from the Cross were words that convey the very heart of our Savior’s work, the very words that should be forming and reforming all aspects of our lives.  These are the words found in Luke 23:34 – “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they are doing.”    
            Didn’t know what they were doing?  Really?   It sure seems the Roman soldiers and the self-satisfied religious leaders knew what they were doing.  It sure seems their plan had gone quite perfectly.   But Jesus wasn’t referring to what they knew of their plan and how very well they had executed it.   He was referring to the fact that none of them, nor any of the disciples up to that point, had truly known God’s plan.   They had not fully understood their sin or Jesus’ identity.   Nor had they recognized that their actions were helping inaugurate the Messiah’s reign.   They’d been too lost in sin, too obsessed with their self-righteous, self-aggrandizing notion of fairness.   The only fairness they could see was to do away with the man so offensively challenging their steadfast traditions, their entrenched authority, their violently successful power plays.    
            Jesus alone knew the devastating depths of holy judgment against all the accumulated sin of humankind.   Instead of executing it according to His authority as the Son of God, he chose instead to empty himself of holy power and allow himself to be executed for it.   He sacrificed Himself for your salvation and of all humankind.   So it was that with his final breaths, and with supremely selfless love, Jesus spoke aloud of forgiving our sin.
            It’s really important to realize that this meant more than giving humankind an eternal mulligan for all that had ever been done against God.   As prominent Bible scholar N.T. Wright has pointed out, to be forgiven of sin is the same as being released from death.[i]  Jesus’ prayerful proclamation from the Cross announced that he was in the process of personally securing our release from all that causes spiritual and physical death.  And so when Mary Magdalene, Simon Peter and another disciple Jesus loved found Jesus’ tomb empty, they realized he’d risen from the death-grip of sin and the Good News became wonderfully clear – all God’s children had been wholly forgiven.   
            As Jesus’ followers, fair play goes beyond our abiding by long standing cultural rules about how to treat one another equally well.    The measuring stick for what is fair and what is unfair in all our human relationships and for God’s relationship with us is the Cross of Jesus.    As Easter people, as people who believe in the forgiveness of sin, in life beyond death and in Christ’s kingdom here on earth as it is in heaven, how are we to apply this eternal measure to our everyday lives?   Through our Lord’s ongoing saving grace and through our steadfast faith, we will do so by striving to live holier lives that above all exhibit our belief in the forgiveness of sin.   Again, this means more than absolving guilt, it means helping ourselves and others experience spiritual release from the constantly present, life-oppressing, fear-inducing and destructive power of death.    In the love of Jesus Christ, when we say “I forgive you” it’s really the same as saying “I release you to be more alive.”  
            I dearly wish this Easter Good News meant that none of us on this earthly plain would ever again have to suffer sin and its consequential spider-web ways that cause us to die a little every day.   I wish our holy release was complete, that we all were not stuck waiting for a final culmination when our Lord comes again in glory.    We are in the great company of every Christian in the world over the past couple thousand years on this count.   
            What I believe can help us all is to feel a kinship with the earliest followers of Christ.  Theirs was a very pregnant expectation of the Risen Lord’s return.  But time passed on and on.   Rather than growing in disappointment and resentment, instead of daily decrying that the delay just wasn’t fair, they instead kept striving to live holier lives.   They kept increasing their faithful trust in the Holy Spirit driven, living and liberating presence of the Risen Lord.   They perhaps realized, as I encourage us all to do today as well, that’s God’s eternity can’t be measure by our sense of time and that Jesus Christ is indeed the same yesterday, today and forever (Hebrews 13:8).  Indeed, as the Psalm 90 declares, a thousand years in God’s sight are like a day just gone by.   
            And those first church members understood that being forgiven, released from sin and it’s ultimate consequence of death, was about more than just getting “individual sinners right with God.”  They understood Easter as a “whole way of life, the new covenant way of life in which the restoration which God offered to all who believed in Jesus was to characterize families and communities, worldviews and life-paths.”   When coming upon “anything amiss in human relations or society” they expected one another to “move heaven and earth to put it right, to restore things to the way they should be.”[ii]    One of my favorite N.T. Wright quotes says it this way – “Jesus’ resurrection is the beginning of God’s new project not to snatch people away from earth to heaven but to colonize earth with the life of heaven.”[iii]
            Practicing forgiveness as we’ve been forgiven is never easy.    We are generally more adept at holding fast to our hurt and grief, at fearing and avoiding the topic of death then accepting and feeling degrees of release from it all with faith and love.   I promise that you’ll have a front row seat to the myriad of complex human emotions and ways they can deeply complicate our relationships, especially with family, if you attend our upcoming production of the play Lost In Yonkers.  
            Yet what Marjorie Thompson in her Lenten study on the topic of forgiveness says is also most definitely true.  She declares that if we care to listen, there are countless stories of forgiveness all around us and that “we are resilient creatures, capable of throwing off shackles of bitterness and discovering more about ourselves and others over time.”   She further affirms that we can all “begin to see that rage, grief and lust for retaliation can easily trap us in a self-imposed prison of hate that corrodes our soul’s energy and peace” and that “choosing forgiveness is one of the most freeing and healing choices we can make in life.”[iv]
            Hear again the Good News that makes every single day Easter day.  He is Risen!  You are released!  In Jesus Christ we are all wholly forgiven.   May we joyfully depart from this gathering with spring in our steps, eternal hope in our hearts, a desire to be in constant worship, and eager to express our gratitude for this most holy gift of forgiveness through daily life-affirming, Lord praising words and actions.  Amen!
           

    






[i] N.T. Wright Evil and the Justice of God, p. 90
[ii] http://ntwrightpage.com/sermons/Easter07
[iii] N.T. Wright Surprised by Hope
[iv] Marjorie Thomson Forgiveness: A Lenten Study, chapter 5

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