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Let’s
start right out with the text. Let’s not dance around it,
tiptoe into it, or build an anecdote-laden foundation under
it. Jesus said it. All I am doing is repeating it.
In
the world you will have tribulation.
But be of good cheer, I have overcome the world.
If
you trust the chronology of the gospel of John (and I see no
reason not to), those were the last words Jesus spoke to his
disciples, at the last supper of his life, on the last night
of his life.
In the world you will have tribulation.
But be of good cheer, I have overcome the world.
*
* * * * *
In
the Greek Orthodox Church, when a child is baptized….and by
“child,” I mean a real infant (literally, still
damp)….after the baptism has been performed, the priest
takes the large pectoral cross that is suspended on a chain
from his neck and forcibly strikes the child on its chest. The
blow is so hard that it leaves a mark….so hard that it hurts
the child….and so hard that the child screams. Here we give
the baptismal family a rose. There, they give the child a
whack. What gives?
I’ll
explain what gives. The symbolism of our Orthodox friends is
clear. They are suggesting that any child baptized into Christ
must bear the cross….and the cross is not a sign of ease,
victory, prosperity or success, but a sign of sorrow, pain and
even death.
Like
those Greek Orthodox babies, we Christians should not be
surprised when trial and tribulation bubble up in the normal
ebb and flow of life’s river. Nor should we be seduced by
phony versions of the Christian faith which suggest that once
we have it (by baptism, confirmation or conversion), we are
immune to trouble. “In this world you will have
tribulation.” Yes, you. Not just those people who aren’t
here this morning, because they couldn’t get up this
morning, because they stayed awake into the wee, small hours
of the morning sinning the night away. Yes, they will have
tribulation also. Maybe sooner. Maybe deeper. But none of us
has been dealt a “get out of tribulation free” card. None
of us.
Which
reality we rehearsed in the September 11 service which packed
this place out last Wednesday. There was a lot of healing in
that hour. But there was a lot of pain, too. Of all the things
that were said (and mark my words, there were a lot of
wonderful things said….and sung….and played on the cello),
I was most powerfully affected by Jeff Nelson’s introductory
remarks to his reading of scripture. Jeff Nelson is our
15-hour-per-week intern. He’s here for the year. He’s got
a little longer to go in seminary. But his schedule allows him
to live in Detroit (down around Military and Livernois), work
here, take classes both here and in Illinois, and somehow
manage to avoid becoming schizoid in the process.
Said
Jeff (last Wednesday):
Last
year was the hardest year of my life. No sooner had I
cemented my call to ministry and commenced training for it
full time, but the towers came down, the Market came down,
the priesthood came down, the fragile accords in the Middle
East came down, and a slew of little kids (now numbering two
dozen and counting) began being shot down in the city that I
love and on the streets where I live. Last year tried my
faith, tested my calling and shook my soul.
I
understand that. I’ve got 38 years on Jeff (vocationally
speaking). I’ve not only heard Jesus say, “In this world
you will have tribulation,” I have tasted tribulation, both
from my plate and from yours. You didn’t know I ate from
your plate, did you? But I do. And Jeff will, too, once we
teach him that tasting tribulation from the plates of his
parishioners is one of the inside secrets of ministry.
In
searching for an image to characterize the year we’ve been
through, I allowed a college preacher from Dover, Delaware
(Susan Olson, I think they call her) to take me to the
amusement park. Now you need to know that I am not big on
amusement parks, given that I no longer do “high,” nor do
I any longer do “fast.” But I’m not a total wuss. I
still do a few scary things. I do flume rides, runaway mine
cars and the Big Thunder Mountain Railroad at Disney World.
And I still do the Rotor. Do they still have the Rotor? I hope
so. Because it is so theologically descriptive, don’t you
see.
The
Rotor works on the principle of centrifugal force. It’s like
a circular barrel. You ride it standing up with your back
pressed against the barrel wall. Then it starts
spinning….slowly at first….then faster and faster, until
all that passes before your eyes becomes a blur. And the
increasing speed of the rotation forces you against the
wall….pins you against the wall, really. Which is a very
good thing (being pinned against the wall, I mean). Because
the floor drops away, leaving your feet with nothing to rest
on but air.
So
you can see how the Rotor becomes a mirror of real life. There
you are, on the ride of your life, and suddenly the floor
falls out. Things on which you stood with confidence suddenly
aren’t there.
Of
all the sermons preached on the Sunday after September 11 last
year, every other one I read (and I read an entire book of
them) quoted Psalm 46. That’s the psalm that begins: “God
is our refuge and our strength, a very present help in time of
trouble.” But note what the psalmist says next. He says that
we will not fear, though the mountains tremble and shake. Now
I’ve got to tell you, I’m not Carl Price. And I haven’t
done a ton of mountains. But if I were walking on a mountain
and it began to “tremble and shake,” I would suffer a
crisis of confidence. I would suddenly find myself wondering:
“Why is there nothing firm where my soles once rested….or
where my soul once rested?”
In this world you will have tribulation.
But
be of good cheer, Jesus said. In some of the more recent
translations, the sentence reads: “Be of good courage.”
Actually, either word is supportable. Some prefer
“courage” to “cheer,” given that it sounds a bit less
frivolous. But for the sake of the sermon, I’d just as soon
stick with “cheer.” “Be of good cheer,” Jesus said,
“for I have overcome the world.” Which is, on the face of
it, an incredible promise. But the promise was kept, don’t
you see….at least initially. For the very people to whom it
was given faced tribulation, yet found cheer….and (over
time) demonstrated courage. I’m talking about the disciples,
don’t you see, following the death of Jesus.
For
the promise was made to a group….not to a solitary
individual. And I have got to believe that’s how Jesus
intended them to receive it….collectively. The Christian
hope has always been a “we shall overcome” kind of thing
more than an “I shall overcome” kind of thing. We do
Christianity a disservice when we over-individualize it. We
are in this together.
Barb
Plants told me a story the other day about Mother Teresa in
heaven, shortly after her arrival. Came suppertime of day one
and God gave Teresa two slices of bread and a can of tuna
fish. Which she converted into a sandwich. And which was tasty
enough and filling. Except on a video screen depicting life in
the other place, Teresa could see people dining on platters of
shrimp and lobster, with a couple of crab cakes thrown in for
good measure.
Suppertime
of day two, God again supplied Teresa with a can of Star-Kist
and a couple slices of sourdough. But the video transmission
from the other place showed a choice that evening between
brisket and bouillabaisse. Still, Teresa ate without
complaint. But when suppertime of day three produced more tuna
fish for Teresa, but turkey and dressing for the residents of
the other place, Teresa inquired of God (ever so gently, mind
you) as to why it was sandwiches up here and smorgasbord down
there. To which God answered: “Really, Teresa, you want I
should mess up the kitchen for just two?”
The
irony of that story is not that it depicts Teresa eating so
poorly, but so singularly. As if the favored were really quite
few. And as if earlier loyalists had forsaken and fled.
Elijah,
feeling more than a little sorry for himself as God’s
mouthpiece in a society that had gone to hell in a handbasket,
tells God: “Look, I’m pretty much the only good guy
you’ve got left. Everybody else has sold out and is
worshiping your rival.” To which God says: “What are you
talking about? Come out of that cave in which you’re moping
and look around. When you do, you’ll see seven
thousand….count ‘em….who haven’t so much as even bent
a knee to Baal.”
My
friends, the crisis of our time has produced both terrible
pain and terrific people. And without the example and
encouragement of the latter, we would have long since been
done in by the former. That has been so well documented, and
so widely experienced, that I need only mention it in passing.
But just in case you’re moping around in some cave, or
subsisting on a daily diet of tuna fish at a table for one,
look beyond you and see the incredible things that God is
doing with others around you….which should most certainly
cheer you….that is, if you let it.
But
the promise of Jesus is more than that. Much more than that.
Be of good cheer, for I have overcome the world.
So
what does that mean….especially in a world that is teeming
with tribulation?
Well,
for the Christian, it means that September 11th was not the
day that changed the world. Let me say that again. September
11th was not the day that changed the world. So when was the
day that changed the world? Well, it was late in the spring of
29 or 30 AD….meaning that each and every disaster has to be
evaluated in the light of the first and only Easter. To be
sure, says Stan Hauerwas, this is easier said than done. But I
think it will make sense to you if I set it in the context of
something with which many of you are familiar.
I
am not a very good historian. And I am a terrible military
historian. But military historians tell me that in every war
there is a battle that decisively determines the outcome of
the war. It’s not necessarily the battle that ends the war.
It’s just the battle that tells you who is going to prevail
when the war ends.
In
the Civil War, that battle was Gettysburg. In the Napoleonic
wars, that battle was Waterloo. In World War II, it was
D-Day….the day in which the Allies landed on the beaches of
Normandy. Everybody knew that if the Allies were driven back
into the sea, it could have been over for us. However, the
Nazis knew that if the beach were taken and held, it would
likely be over for them. So much so that, when we established
the beachhead, Rommel joined in a subversive plot to
assassinate Hitler because he knew that the Nazis could not
win, and he knew that Hitler would never give up.
So
the Normandy invasion….D-Day….was the decisive battle. But
it must be pointed out that more people died in Europe between
D-Day and V-Day, than before D-Day. After Normandy, the
outcome of the war in Europe was never in doubt. But there was
still terrible suffering, much death and great agony to be
experienced.
While
I do not fully understand all the implications of what I am
about to say, I believe that in the ongoing struggle with
evil….and I mean the evil that is an inside job every bit as
much as the evil that is an outside job….the decisive battle
has already been fought and won in the death and resurrection
of Jesus Christ. One of the reasons I don’t believe in
Armageddon is because I believe the tide has already turned
and the outcome is certain. As I said one year ago today, I
believe in the final triumph of righteousness. So waste not
even one more box of Kleenex on the Almighty. God has the will
to win. And God will win. As Paul said to the Philippians
(1:6), “The one who began a good work in you will complete
it.”
A
couple of weeks ago, I stumbled across….or was led to….one
of the most succinctly marvelous definitions of Christianity I
have ever encountered. It was a favorite aphorism of one
Georges Tyrell, a famous Catholic modernist from the first
third of the 20th century. Listen to what Father Tyrell said:
Christianity
is an ultimate optimism founded on a provisional pessimism.
Which
is simply another way of saying:
In this world you will have tribulation.
But be of good cheer, for I have overcome the world.
Note: This morning’s sermon constitutes a reprise, one year
later, of my post-September 11, 2001 sermon entitled “I
Believe in the Final Triumph of Righteousness.” In preparing
this material, I had the advantage of reading several sermons
preached in response to September 11, one year ago. They are
collected and available in a book by William Willimon entitled
The Sunday After Tuesday: College Pulpits Respond to 9/11.
Specific help was gleaned from Peter Gomes, Stan Hauerwas,
Susan Olson and Tony Campolo. The quote of Georges Tyrell,
reflected in the title, comes from Peter Gomes.
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