christian

The (bad) Sermon Heard Round The World

The newly-inaugurated president and vice-president participated this week in the tradition of attending a prayer service at the Washington National Cathedral. The event is one that has followed Inauguration Days for decades and mostly transpires without much attention.

Notable at this event, though, a local Episcopal Bishopess spent a portion of her 15-minute “sermon” to implore the president directly to show “mercy” to “LGBTQ+ people” and to immigrants illegally present in the country during his new administration. In what seemed like an odd and demeaning argument to me, she reminded the new executive branch leaders that these people, migrants, “pick our crops, clean our office buildings, labor in poultry farms,” and “wash our dishes after we eat.” But, I digress.

As part of her entreaty, the Bishopess loosely quoted from Leviticus 19, saying, “God teaches us that we are to be merciful to the stranger.” I had several – unrelated – reactions this event and proceeding debate. Those reactions follow.

 

A BLATANT HYPOCRISY

Generationally, I’m an elder millennial. I was formed in a time where just about everyone left-of-center had a hypersensitive, negative reflex against any proposal or policy that even hinted at being motivated by Biblical values. The entire secular, progressive regime of my lifetime demanded a strict  “separation of church and state,” and vigorously demanded we all keep our faith out of politics.

I’ll re-visit another time why that demand is incoherent. For now, worthy of note is that the same subsets of people who have spent their lives demanding that Biblical commands play no role in public policy are now lauding what they perceive as a pastor encouraging a politician to “do what the Bible says.”

In what other scenario does the secular left encourage a pastor to invoke God’s law as a demand on a politician? Yes, that’s a rhetorical question – and one that lays bare a gross hypocrisy.

 

BUT WAS SHE RIGHT?

Brazen hypocrisy aside, I do find it worth while to at least ask, “but does she have a point?” That answer is interesting, complicated, and requires precision.

Take the passage in Leviticus mentioned in the sermon. In verses 33-34, God’s people are enjoined not to do the stranger wrong and to treat him as a neighbor. We have good truth here for the individual Christian citizen: treat all your neighbors with honor.

However, a directive for individual behavior does not inveigh for a particular policy from a government. The citizen has his role (treat your neighbor well), and the government has a different role (enforce laws – Romans 13, I Peter 2:13-14).

The Bible is well balanced here: to individuals, don’t mistreat your neighbor. To governments, take care of your responsibility and love your citizens by being orderly and enforcing laws. Further wisdom on this would also suggest that sometimes, with wisdom, a government will seek out and admit foreigners for the benefit of that country’s own citizens.

CONCLUSION

 In the coming months, to varying degrees, the citizens of the US will wrestle with what to do with millions of people present in the country illegally. I want Christians to be free from the guilt trips like the one laid out by this bishopess (who would, by the way, despise and reject almost every other command in the book from which she quoted). I also want to encourage Christians to let their attitudes be charitable and kind toward fellow human beings, all the while seeing the sense and justice of laws and good order being enforced.

The Supreme Court Leak, Abortion, and What Happens Next

The Supreme Court Leak, Abortion, and What Happens Next

Lives will be saved. If this ruling becomes official, some untold thousands of children, made in the image of God, will come into the world.

  • Those little lives, their mothers, and their fathers, will sometimes need help. If you, like me, want to see abortion end, prepare for the success of your movement by donating time and money to your local crisis pregnancy center.

    • Those centers provide training for parents.

    • Those centers often provide formula and diapers as well.

    • If we want to see more children live instead of be killed in the womb, let’s be ready to support them however we can.

Palm Sunday Reflection -- Jesus and his Mysterious Kingdom

PALM SUNDAY

COVID-19 can cancel a lot, but it can’t cancel Holy Week.

Tomorrow, the world’s Christ-followers start an entire week of remembering the final week of Jesus’s earthly ministry, and it begins with Palm Sunday.

FROM CORONATION TO EXECUTION

If you came to read the story of Jesus with no background information from childhood and our surrounding culture, Palm Sunday seems like the logical climax to his story. He had spent three years displaying his absolute authority over sickness, nature, demons, the religious authorities, and even death.

So, it would not surprise the reader to see Jesus being lauded as the rescuer and liberator of his people as he rides into Jerusalem. Indeed, that image is exact one a person would expect — a king coming to take his throne. The imagery is clearly kingly — riding in, atop a beast, a royal procession with the accompanying adulation and celebration.

However, we all actually do have that background information. We know how the week ends. In a matter of days, Jesus goes from hearing people praising him as “Hosanna” and “Son of David” to hearing some of those same voices shout, “crucify him!”

The beginning of the week looked like a sure coronation, but the end of the week was an execution.

If we look at the week deeper, though, we find that the coronation Palm Sunday promised did emphatically take place. It just happened in a way that surprises us all.

CONSIDER THE KINGLY ELEMENTS

It isn’t just the Triumphal Entry into Jerusalem that indicates Jesus was heading for enthronement.

Jesus gets to Jerusalem and goes straight to where a king would be installed — the temple.

New kings also come with feasts, and Jesus instituted his own feast in the Lord’s Supper that week.

This sounds disorienting, but during his trial and crucifixion, he is pronounced as king (by a soldier declaring it in mockery)

Jesus is given a crown and robe.

These are all the trappings of a king being led to the moment where he finally takes a seat on his throne. Of course, the way we read it, though, Jesus isn’t enthroned. Instead of being lifted up on a throne, he is lifted up on a cross.

Consider what happens when he is on the cross, though. Among many other highlights, Matthew records in his Gospel that at Jesus’s death, “the curtain of the temple was torn in two, from top to bottom” (Matthew 27:51).

The curtain that separated God and man for millennia was torn open, inaugurating a new reality of the access humankind now has to God, through Christ.

It was from the cross that Jesus did his royal work — absorbing the wrath of God for sin and re-establishing an Edenic reality of God dwelling with his people.

Reflecting on this, Dietrich Bonhoeffer said this:

 ”A king who dies on the cross must be the king of a rather strange kingdom. For while the kingdoms of this world are built by force, the kingdom of God is founded on grace. In his crown of thorn and purple robe, we see him adorned as a king. In his crucifixion, Jesus takes his rightful throne on the earth.”

Palm Sunday hinted at Jesus being enthroned as king, and he was. It just happened in a more cosmic and glorious way than we could have ever imagined. He wasn’t installed as a king of just an earthly kingdom with its own borders, laws and customs.

On the cross, he was enthroned rightfully as the King of All Creation for all of time.

The people on Palm Sunday we’re crying out to be saved from an earthly oppression. Jesus delivered an even better liberation: liberation from sin and ultimately death.

Final Thought

We are often like those folks at Palm Sunday. We cry out for rescue, and we think our desired version of events is the exact rescue we need. All the while, God is rescuing us — but doing it in a better way than we could have imagined ourselves.