Sunday, April 19, 2026

Gods and Kings

The idea that the king is a god was pretty much universal in the ancient world. Monarchs were seen either as deities, descendants of the gods, or as their divinely appointed representatives. The first Mesopotamian ruler to declare himself to be divine was Naram-Sin of Akkad. Ruling sometime in the 23rd century BC, he referred to himself as the husband/warrior of the goddess Ishtar. Even before that, Egyptian pharaohs were seen as incarnations of either Horus, the war and sky god, or Re, the sun god. Mayan kings were supposedly possessed by gods. Kings were also regarded as sacred in Polynesia, Africa and, until the end of World War 2, even Japan.

In Jesus' day, the Roman emperor wasn't considered a god until he died. That changed with Caligula. Yet even before him, people worshiped the genius or divine spirit that accompanied the emperor from his birth to his death. The Jews refused to do this, of course, and Rome, realizing that monotheism was essential to Judaism, got them to agree to pray to Yahweh for the emperor. But elsewhere, the emperor was treated as a god for all practical purposes. The Senate could not oppose him and the Roman Republic was no more. The emperor had absolute power over everyone's lives.

That was the main reason why Christians were persecuted. By declaring Jesus Christ to be Lord of all and King of kings, Christianity was saying that neither the emperor, or any earthly ruler, had ultimate power. There was Someone over them to whom even they ought to swear allegiance. So beginning with Nero, it became dangerous to proclaim that Jesus was the unique Son of God. Because it meant he had the last word on what was right and what was wrong, regardless of what any earthly authority said was legal.

Ancient Israel, however, did not always have a king. When the tribes were attacked, God called a person, male or female, to be their leader. (Judges 4:4-6) These were called judges. But eventually the people approach the aging Samuel, then the current judge, and say, “Appoint over us a king to lead us, just like all the other nations.” (1 Samuel 8:5) Samuel is upset and prays to God. The Lord says to him, “Do everything the people request of you. For it is not you that they have rejected but it is me that they have rejected as their king. Just as they have done from the day that I brought them up from Egypt until this very day, they have rejected me and have served other gods. This is what they are also doing to you. So now do as they say. But seriously warn them and make them aware of the policies of the king who will rule over them.” (1 Samuel 8:7-9) And Samuel warns them that by giving one human being such power he will conscript their sons into his army, make their daughters work for him, and take their best fields, vineyards, servants and animals for himself and for his administrators.

God had anticipated that the people would want a king before they even entered the land of Canaan. In Deuteronomy 17, God sets some limits over how a king should act. He should not accumulate horses for himself. He must not marry many wives or acquire a lot of gold and silver. He must write down God's law, keep it with him and study it all his life. And finally he should not “exalt himself above his fellow citizens or turn from the commandments to the right or to the left...” (Deuteronomy 17:16-20)

That kind of king is not a god but a godly person, knowing and obeying what God requires from us all. Like not having any gods other than the Lord, not creating any images to be worshiped, not misusing God's name, setting apart the Sabbath as a holy day, honoring one's parents, not committing murder, not committing adultery, not stealing, not giving false testimony against others, and not desiring what someone else has. A ruler who breaks these 10 commandments is not a godly person. When David committed both adultery and murder, God told him through Nathan the prophet that it would bring disaster upon him and his household. (2 Samuel 12:9-10) Again the king is not a law unto himself but must follow God's law, even in his personal life.

After Christianity had become a legal religion, the problem for all the subsequent kings and emperors was that now they had to admit that there was in fact an authority higher than them. So they tried to tame Christianity. They made it the only legal religion so they could restore it to the role that religions had before Jesus: to bless the status quo. They made the church an arm of the state. Some rulers, like King James 1, claimed the divine right of kings, which meant their authority came directly from God, and thus they could not be held accountable to any earthly authority, like, say, Parliament or some other elected body of mere men. Or those clergy who preached against them.

Such rulers leaned into the part of Romans 13 that says, “Let every person be subject to the authorities over him. For there is no authority except by God, and the authorities that exist have been instituted by God. Therefore the one resisting the authority has resisted the arrangement of God; those resisting will now bring upon themselves judgment.” (Romans 13:1-2) But rulers ignore the verse that follows, which says, “for he is God's servant for your good.” (Romans 13:4) If they don't do that with their authority, they aren't fulfilling their purpose. Didn't God, in spelling out how kings should behave, warn the people that such a powerful person is likely to do things that are not good for them? Aren't there numerous examples of kings of Israel and Judah who did what was evil in God's sight? And didn't God's prophets point that out, even at the risk to their own lives?

What God arranged was not a person but a position of leadership. Order is preferable to chaos. But if the person in a position of leadership is not good or wise, if what he or she is doing is evil, like Queen Jezebel of Israel who killed God's prophets (1 Kings 18:4) or King Manasseh of Judah who worshiped other gods and killed innocent people, God will not support them. (2 Kings 21:1-16) King Herod Agrippa had James the brother of John executed and Peter imprisoned. When he accepted the people's praise for having the voice of a god and did not give glory to the Lord, he was struck down by a deadly illness. (Acts 12:1-4, 21-23) When the Sanhedrin, the council that had the authority over the Jews in Jerusalem, gave the apostles strict orders not to teach in Jesus' name, Peter and the Twelve replied, “We must obey God rather than people.” (Acts 5:27-29) Having authority isn't a blank check or permission to do what you will, no matter how evil. After all, we rightfully see those who disobeyed Hitler, the legally appointed chancellor of Germany, as heroes. Christians like Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Karl Barth spoke out prophetically against the Nazis, who were the official party of the government.

In the countries where Christianity has come to be accepted, few political leaders have dared to declare themselves to be God. However, cult leaders have. And Jesus knew this would happen. He said, “For false messiahs and false prophets will appear and perform great signs and wonders to deceive, if possible, even the elect.” (Matthew 24:24) And, of course, it is especially dangerous if a political leader is also the leader of a cult, and accepts the title of Messiah or God. Paul foresees one whom he calls the “man of lawlessness” who will set himself up as God. (2 Thessalonians 2:3-4) He could have been speaking about an emperor such as Nero. But as someone said, while history may not exactly repeat itself, it rhymes. The possibility of such a politician is always there.

Because there are always arrogant people, people who think they are smarter, better and more competent than anyone else. And when the arrogant are given power, the people under them suffer. As Psalm 10 says, “The wicked arrogantly chase the oppressed; the oppressed are trapped by the schemes the wicked have dreamed up. Yes, the wicked man boasts because he gets what he wants; the one who robs others curses and rejects the Lord. The wicked man is so arrogant he always thinks, 'God won't hold me accountable; he doesn't care.' He is secure at all times. He has no regard for your commands; he disdains all his enemies. He says to himself, 'I will never be upended, because I experience no calamity.' His mouth is full of curses and deceptive, harmful words; his tongue injures and destroys.” (Psalm 10:2-7) Such people have always existed. And somehow they have always managed to get other people to grant them power.

Unfortunately, when leaders declare themselves to be god, it's not because they desire to be like God in terms of character but in terms of power. They want to be obeyed like God but they do not want to obey him. And they certainly do not want to emulate the only person in the Bible who is held up as the ideal king: Jesus, God Incarnate.

Jesus refused earthly and political power at his temptation in the wilderness. He did not claim it when he was arrested, when asked if he was a king by Pilate, or when the jeering crowds told him they would believe he was the king of Israel if he came down from the cross. (Matthew 4:8-10; 26:51-54; 27:42; John 18:36) Instead he said, “For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.” (Mark 10:45) And he did serve others. He healed them. He fed them. He showed them God's love and forgiveness, not just in what he said but in what he did.

Jesus did not use the power God gave him to make his own life better but to make the lives of others better. And overwhelmingly they were the poor and the despised and the excluded; the people powerful folks call losers. Jesus didn't just project an image of caring and healing; he actually touched the blind, the lame, the lepers, and the dead. And he said that if we really want to serve him as our King, we need to give the hungry, the thirsty, the naked, the sick, the imprisoned and the immigrant what they need. Because whatever we do to those whom the world counts as the least important, we do to him. If you want to see Jesus, don't look to the powerful but the powerless and to those who serve them like Jesus did. (Matthew 25:31-46)

All those ancient kings and emperors who declared themselves to be gods are dead. No one worships those psychopaths and narcissists any longer. Their power died with them. But Jesus lives and his power is still active in the world. Unlike those false god-kings, he did not leave a legacy of cold and dead monuments, doomed to crumble over time or be demolished. His legacy is the people who still trust him and follow him, who obey the commandments to love God with all they are and all they have, and to love their neighbors as they do themselves and even love their enemies. That legacy will live on until Jesus returns and the kingdoms of this world will become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ. And he shall reign forever and ever.

Monday, April 13, 2026

Good Above All Other

The scriptures referred to are Psalm 16 and John 20:19-21.

When reading the lectionary passages for this Sunday, one phrase really stuck with me. It's the second line in Psalm 16, which goes, “You are my Lord, my good above all other.” This is a key truth about our faith. God is our good above all other good things. If you don't subscribe to that, whatever moral or ethical system you replace it with will not stand up to all the challenges of life.

This may upset some people. They think that putting God above everything else can lead to fanaticism. Which is true but only if you have a distorted view of God. If you think of him as a giant narcissist and cosmic killjoy, then, yes, prioritizing that kind of god above all other things will lead to people doing horrible things in his name. So before we even consider putting God first, we need to define what we mean by God.

There are lots of conceptions of God out there, from that of various religions to those conceived by certain philosophers. Because we are Christians, we are going to be using the Bible as our database. And right off the bat, in the first line of the first book of the Bible, we are told that God created everything. This is important because not all gods were seen as creators. In some cases, a god became the primary one by defeating a monster or serpent or other god. In some cases, the material world is not real but an illusion created by faulty thinking or a lack of connection with the divine mind. But the God of the Bible created everything and pronounced his creation good. Matter, the earth, our bodies and our minds are all good things.

Next we are told, again in the first chapter of Genesis, that God created humans in his image. (Genesis 1:27) What exactly that image is does not get spelled out. But if we look at the rest of the chapter we see that God is intelligent, creative, communicative and delights in all that he has made. And we see that humans also have, to a higher degree than all other animals, intelligence, creativity, the ability to communicate, and an ability to appreciate the goodness of creation.

In the second chapter we learn something else about humans. We are social animals. It is not good for us to be alone. (Genesis 2:18) We need other humans and we form pair-bonds. We don't merely seek out the opposite sex to mate with and then go about our ways like some animals, such as the Key deer. We don't give birth and then let the offspring fend for themselves, like sea turtles. We become families. (Genesis 2:24) We love our spouses and our children. Is this another way in which we reflect God?

In 1 John 4:8, we are told that God is love. It doesn't merely say that God is loving but that God is love. We were created in the image of an eternal love relationship. One way to make sense of the Trinity is that God is the Father loving the Son loving the Father in the unity of the Spirit of that love so that the three are essentially one in mind and will.

And the fact that God is love is essential. To put a god who is not primarily love above all else leads to the distorted versions of religion that have justified atrocities. If God is primarily a creator, he doesn't necessarily have to love his creatures. He could be like Sir Arthur Conan Doyle who grew to hate his creation, Sherlock Holmes, and killed him off because he drew attention from his more “serious” books. And God certainly has a right to get mad at us for the way we have used his gifts to harm each other and the rest of his creation. But just as you may not always like your child because of what they have done (hit their brother or sister, stolen money, developed habits that are harmful to them and others) you still love them. And so God continues to love us even though he is not happy with all the things we have done.

Some see God as primarily just. But justice without love is harsh and merciless. And there are societies today where there are some rather brutal punishments, like caning for vandalism in Singapore, flogging for criticizing religion in Afghanistan, and amputation for theft and beheading for drug offenses in Saudi Arabia. And in some places simply being suspected of being illegally in the country can get you locked up in overcrowded cages and warehouses.

God's justice comes out of his love. If you have more than one kid and love them all, you don't want to play favorites. You treat them all with the same standard of fairness. Yet at times you are also merciful. If a child has given his brother a black eye and is upset at himself for doing so and is sorry and in tears, you treat him differently than if he were without remorse. Justice is getting what you deserve. Mercy is not getting all that you deserve.

But God is more than merciful. He is gracious. Grace is getting what you do not and could not deserve. God gives us second chances and more. Peter denied Jesus three times while his master was being tried. After his resurrection Jesus gave him three opportunities to confirm his love. (John 21:15-17) Paul persecuted the church. Jesus appeared to him and commissioned him to spread the gospel to the Gentiles. Then there is what happened at his crucifixion. The criminal on the very next cross rebuked his fellow insurrectionist for insulting Jesus. “Don't you fear God,” he said, “for you are under the same sentence? We are punished justly, for we are getting what our deeds deserve. But this man has done nothing wrong.” Then he said, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.” Jesus answered him, “I tell you the truth, today you will be with me in paradise.” (Luke 23:40-43) That man is the only person Jesus ever said that to. And there was no way that man could undo the harm he had done. But he admitted his guilt, asserted Jesus' innocence and recognized him as a king. And Jesus accepted that as faith in him and promised that they would enjoy paradise together.

So if we acknowledge that the God revealed in Jesus—loving, just, merciful, forgiving and gracious—is the true God, then he is worthy to be our good above all others.

And it follows from the fact that all humans are created in the image of this God that we must treat others with love as well. Indeed when Jesus was asked what was the greatest commandment, he gave not one but two: “'Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.' This is the first and greatest commandment. The second is like it: 'Love your neighbor as yourself.' All the law and the prophets depend on these two commandments.” (Matthew 22:37-40) He also says, “There is no other commandment greater than these.” (Mark 12:31)

All Christian morality derives from these two commandments. We are to love God above all and we love our neighbors as we do ourselves. But why should we treat them as we do ourselves? Because we cut ourselves a great deal of slack. For instance, when we are in conflict with others, we blame them for the results of what they did, but we judge ourselves by our intentions. When someone breaks something important or messes up a situation, we don't accept their protests that they didn't mean to do that. But when we are the ones who are responsible for creating a problem, we quickly say, “I didn't mean to do that!” and expect to be excused. We need to be as forgiving of others as we are of ourselves. As Jesus said, “In everything, treat others as you would want them to treat you, for this fulfills the law and the prophets.” (Matthew 7:12)

But just as it is important to define what we mean by God, we also need to define what we mean by neighbor. Is it just the people next door? Is it just the people in my town, or state or country? No, says Jesus. When asked just who was our neighbor, Jesus told the parable of the good Samaritan. The Jews and Samaritans had a long history of hating one another. Each regarded the other as heretics and worse. But in Jesus' parable two supposedly pious Jews, a priest and a Levite, see a man beaten and left for dead and avoid him. The Samaritan, whom Jesus' original audience thought would be the villain, turns out to be the hero. He gives the victim first aid, takes him to an inn, nurses him through the night and then pays for any further care the man needs. Jesus asks the scribe who posed the question, which of the three in the parable acted as a neighbor to the victim? The expert in religious law could not even say “The Samaritan,” but instead says, “The one who showed mercy to him.” To which Jesus replies, “Go and do the same.” (Luke 10:29-37) Our neighbor, according to Jesus, is anyone we encounter, regardless of race, creed or any other descriptor. We are to love them all.

But people still try to draw the line between who is our neighbor and who is not, and therefore whom we do not have to love. Jesus erases that line. In the Sermon on the Mount, he addresses this unwritten corollary to the commandments. Jesus says, “You have heard that it was said, 'Love your neighbor' and hate your enemy. But I say to you, love your enemy and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be like your Father in heaven, since he causes the sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. For if you love those who love you, what reward do you have? Even the tax collectors do the same, don't they? And if you only greet your brothers, what more do you do? Even the Gentiles do the same, don't they? So then, be completely good, as your heavenly Father is completely good.” (Matthew 5:43-48)

Again Jesus takes it back to God, who is “perfect” or as I translated it, “completely good.” And he gives examples of God's common grace, his goodness to all, whether or not they deserve it. He sends sun and rain on all, both good things, especially in an agricultural society. It goes beyond that. Scientists have noted that our universe is apparently fine-tuned for the existence of life. If any of several universal constants, such as gravity, the strong and electromagnetic forces, the universe's expansion rate and other conditions, were even a tiny bit different, then stars, chemistry and life would not be possible. We are here because of God's grace, his unreserved, undeserved goodness.

And it is vital that we not restrict the definition of goodness. We recognize it as selfishness when someone's personal definition of goodness is “what is good for me and to hell with everyone else.” But we often get confused when that definition of goodness is expanded to “what is good for me and mine.” Mine could be my family or my country or my race or my party. But the corollary is always “and to hell with everyone else.” Ma Barker loved her sons. It didn't matter to her that they robbed and killed other people. Hitler loved his adopted country of Germany. He loved it so much he wanted to purify it of all non-white Germans. He called them “vermin” who were contaminating his country's blood. He saw the sick and handicapped as “useless eaters” and eliminated them before moving on to Jews, Slavs, gypsies, gays, Roman Catholics and other Christians who spoke up about how the Nazis were subverting the real gospel of Jesus.

The only useful definition of goodness is “what is good for all.” And that's why we need to define goodness by referring to God and not to humans. If there is no God and if humans are not created in his image and therefore don't have inherent worth, we have no solid basis for saying we need to treat everyone fairly or with love. So as the final arbiters of morality, why not just eliminate everyone we see as bad? That's what we do in our popular entertainment. The good guys win by killing all the bad guys. Sometimes we disguise this kind of genocide by making the enemies monsters or robots or space aliens. In other words, we make our enemies non-humans. And in real world rhetoric, demagogues paint their enemies as less than human. Because deep down they realize they first have to destroy the idea that they are people made in God's image as well.

God made us to reflect his goodness: his love, his intelligence, his creativity, his justice, his mercy and his graciousness. He gave us all we needed to maintain the finely tuned world he created. We have decided to misuse, abuse and neglect these gifts because we think we know better than the one who made them and made us. Consequently it is hard to see the image of God in people at times. But then God gave us the ultimate in good gifts: his son Jesus. He told us how to live and showed us how in his life. And when we tried to snuff out that life, God raised Jesus from the dead and graciously offered his life, eternal life, to all who turn to him with trust and love. God keeps giving us chances to love him and each other, not merely with our lips but with our lives. One day all the seconds of our lives, all the second chances to change, will run out. One day all of us will see Jesus face to face. Some will do so with hatred. Some will do so with fear. Some will do so with love, saying “My Lord and my God,” as we reach out and embrace the One who is our good above all others. 

Sunday, April 5, 2026

The Death of Death

The scriptures referred to are Matthew 28:1-10.

Comedian John Mulaney was performing at Graceland, and he brought his 4-year-old son. The boy is a huge Elvis fan and so he wanted to tour Elvis' house. While they were in the famous “Jungle room” his son asks if he can meet Elvis. And Mulaney realizes that he doesn't know that Elvis is dead. And all of his son's grandparents are alive and he has never had a goldfish. He has never experienced death and loss. And now Mulaney has to figure out how to tell his son that everybody dies. He opts to simply tell him that Elvis is in heaven. But like all kids, his son asks why. How do you tell a child that his hero died in the most humiliating way, from drug abuse while on the toilet? In relating the story to Stephen Colbert, Mulaney jokes that he told his son, “Well, sometimes when people are in their early 40s, and they have a job and a schedule a lot like Daddy, and some of the same issues as Daddy, they go to the bathroom and they go to heaven.”

How did you learn that everyone dies? When did you realize that you will one day die? It's not a secret, yet while we may decide it's time to tell a kid about the facts of life, we don't usually have a formal talk on the end of life. It just sort of hits you when a pet or a person you love dies. And, weirdly, while it makes sense that you become sad, it is not uncommon that it strikes you as unfair. That's why one of the stages of grief is anger.

And yet in one sense death is the fairest thing there is: it happens to everyone without exception. One can see it as unfair when a person dies young or in a terrible manner. But everyone dies. That's the moral of the oldest surviving written story, the Epic of Gilgamesh. When his best friend, Enkidu, dies, Gilgamesh goes searching for eternal life. But the answer he receives from the only man to survive the great flood is, “Life, which you look for, you will never find. For when the gods created man, they let death be his share, and life withheld in their own hands.”

Even gods die in many mythologies. The Greek god Pan dies. The Egyptian god Osiris dies and becomes king of the underworld. At Ragnarok, the Norse gods, including Odin and Thor, die.

The founders of religions die. The Buddha died in Uttar Pradesh in India some time in the 5th century BC. Muhammad died on June 8, in the year 632 AD. Moses died before entering the promised land, possibly in the 13th century BC. And Jesus died on a Friday in either 30 or 33 AD. But only one of them rose to life again.

Of course, the disciples all knew that the dead don't come back to life, not until the end of the present evil age when all are resurrected to face judgment. Which is why every gospel mentions them doubting when they hear the women say he is risen. Even when they encounter the risen Jesus, they think at first that he is a ghost. Which is why he has them touch him and why he eats with them. He raised others who died of natural deaths but his rising by himself after being crucified is something unprecedented.

Of course, a lot of people since then have doubted this as well. They say the disciples went to the wrong tomb, or all hallucinated the same thing, or just made it up. None of these alternate explanations hold up. The authorities could have simply produced the body.

And why would the disciples do this? To keep the movement going? But Buddhism, Judaism and Islam survived the deaths of their founders. Plus the disciples got persecuted and martyred for holding to their belief. There was no incentive to lie, not when it could get you killed. Yet not one renounced the resurrection.

Could the story have evolved over time, like the legend of King Arthur? There's not enough time. The documents show that it took hundreds of years for a battle leader possibly named Arthur to evolve into the king of all Britain in the now magical tales. But the earliest Christian writings, Paul's letters, already refer to Jesus as God's Son, “whom he raised from the dead.” (1 Thessalonians 1:10) That's in Paul's first letter to the Thessalonians, dated around 50 AD. So it took centuries for a warrior to simply become king but only 2 decades for Jesus, whom people still remembered, to become God's crucified and risen Son?

Plus the first description of Jesus' resurrection appearances is found in Paul's first letter to the Christians in Corinth, composed around 55 AD. He writes, “For I passed on to you as of the first importance what I also received—that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the scriptures, and that he was buried, and that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the scriptures, and that he appeared to Cephas, then to the twelve. Then he appeared to more than five hundred brothers and sisters at one time, most of whom are still alive, though some have died. Then he appeared to James, and then to all the apostles. Last of all, as though to one born at the wrong time, he appeared to me also.” (1 Corinthians 15:3-8) It is gutsy for Paul to mention the 500 who saw him and remark that most are still alive. In other words, Paul is saying, “You don't have to take my word for it; ask one of them.” 

Incidentally, this explains why the gospels were written later. There was no need for the words and works of Jesus to be written down while there were living witnesses around, who could come to your church and tell you about him. The gospels were probably written because of the martyrdoms of the apostles. Mark, who worked with both Peter and Paul, wrote the first gospel in the early to mid-60s AD, when those two were executed by Nero. Matthew and Luke basically took Mark's gospel and added the stories and teachings of Jesus they had access to. John's gospel, composed in the 90s AD, 60 years after the resurrection, appears to have been written with knowledge of the other three and so skips some of the events they record and concentrates on his additional material. John's gospel lets us know that Jesus' ministry lasted at least 3 years.

The process is similar to biographies written about C.S. Lewis, who died in 1963, a little over 60 years ago. I've read most of them and each has facts the others don't. Lewis' stepson David Gresham, who is still alive, revealed things that earlier biographies, mostly written by friends and former students of Lewis, didn't have. And the most recent, written by Alister McGrath, who did not know Lewis, unearthed still more facts and even corrected a crucial date, the year Lewis became a Christian, by reading everything Lewis wrote, including his letters, in chronological order.

While some extreme skeptics try to eliminate the problem by saying Jesus never existed, he is actually better attested by ancient writers than some other historical persons, like Socrates. Bart Ehrman, a respected New Testament scholar who is not however a believer, counts at least thirty ancient independent sources that knew the man Jesus existed. Of course, he and other historians doubt the resurrection. But even historian Michael Grant admitted that without the resurrection of Jesus, it was hard to explain not only the survival of the movement but its explosive growth. But if Jesus defeated death, that would account for it.

Some people think that the idea of resurrection or even an afterlife is unnecessary. If everyone just acknowledged that death is the end, they would realize how precious life is and behave better. But we have seen that is not true. The atheistic countries of the Soviet Union, communist China, and Cambodia killed nearly twice as many people in 1 century (67 million) than are attributed to Christians in 20 centuries (36 million). If anything, belief in the God we see in Jesus restrains us from being as violent as we can be. Because it is just as easy to think that if this is the only life you get, and that there's no afterlife or judgment, then there is ultimately no justice in the universe, life is meaningless in the long run and you should just do whatever you want.

But does Christianity need the resurrection? Aren't its moral teachings enough? Thomas Jefferson cut up a couple of Bibles to paste various passages into a book he entitled The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth. He omitted all of the miracles including the resurrection. I wonder if he noticed that much of what Jesus taught about how to live makes no sense without the resurrection. Jesus said, “You have heard that it was said, 'An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.' But I say to you, do not resist the evildoer. But whoever strikes you on the right cheek, turn the other to him as well.” (Matthew 5:38-39) He tells us to love our enemies and to pray for those who persecute us. (Matthew 5:44) Crucially he says, “If anyone wants to become my follower, he must disown himself, take up his cross, and follow me. For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake and for the gospel will save it.” (Mark 8:34-35) That's a good way to get yourself killed. It got Jesus killed. If death is the end, this is suicide. Jesus' morals would be foolish, not wise.

But what if the afterlife is just continuing in a disembodied state, free from the flesh and its limitations? That would be like being a living brain in a jar or an AI program, where you would unable to use the senses you had while in a body or use the skills you learned and the talents you honed in this life. That doesn't seem like a reward for living in this world. It seems like being imprisoned in a sensory deprivation tank. It seems like hell.

God made the world and pronounced it good. He made us as unities of body and spirit. The spiritual gives the physical meaning and the physical gives the spiritual form and agency. He made us able to sing and dance and run and climb and play and embrace and help one another through the bodies he gave us. The Gnostics thought the material universe was irredeemably bad. The Bible says that the physical universe is good, loaded with God's gifts. It is our misuse, abuse or neglect of them that creates evil. With our intelligence and our bodies we can enhance and save lives or we can harm and destroy them, the same way you can use a knife to perform surgery or commit murder.

Not only does Jesus' resurrection make sense of our embodied existence and his teachings about how to behave, it also demonstrates God's plan for us and for all of creation. Lots of people think the story of the Bible concludes with the end of the world. But it actually continues with the creation of a new heaven and a new earth. God is restoring things to the way he intended them to be, populated by folks who are new creations in Christ, who love and trust him and who love and trust each other, and who use his gifts in good and creative and helpful and healthy ways.

One characteristic of life is growth. Plants and animals grow. Our bodies and our minds grow. And we are meant to grow spiritually as well. Paul talks about how we are to “reach unity in the faith and in the knowledge of the Son of God and become mature, reaching to the very height of Christ's full stature.” (Ephesians 4:13) But how are we finite beings ever going to be able to become completely like the one who is infinite? Only by growing forever. The afterlife is not going to be eternal stasis but eternal growth. It will be a life where our growth in understanding and wisdom and the use of our talents and gifts will not be cut off by death or limited by age. There will always be new horizons to discover. There will always be new things to learn, new things to do and new ways to do them. There will be all the time in the world to find and do good things and to share them with others.

Jesus Christ's resurrection did not just give him new life; it gives all people the opportunity to have a new life. All we have to do is give to him our messed up and limited lives and open ourselves to receive his life, eternal life, the life of the God who is love. Jesus opened up a new way of living, not just to live for ourselves but for him and for others. And he opened a new realm in which we can live, the kingdom where God reigns and his will, to give life in all its abundance, is done on a reborn earth as it is in heaven. When we enter into Christ's life, we will see not only that death is not the end of all our adventures but is the beginning of new ones we can not possibly imagine. It is not the end of all we are but the real start to achieving all that we can be. In Christ, we will find the life we were looking for, the life we were longing for, the life God made us for. He is not withholding it from us; he is holding it out to us. And it can begin now!

Sunday, March 29, 2026

The Death of Violence

The scriptures referred to are Philippians 2:5-11 and Matthew 26:14-27:66.

It should surprise no one that the deadliest war ever fought was the Second World War. The death toll is estimated to be 66 million people, 20 million of whom were soldiers and 46 million of whom were civilians. According to Matthew White's book Atrocities: The 100 Deadliest Episodes in Human History, the largest number of casualties in any war are usually non-combatants. On average, he writes, 85% of the people killed in wars have been civilians. At the end of his book he analyzes what he discovered but found there were no easy answers to what caused most of them, aside from vague things like hatred, stupidity and power. As for the 20th century as a whole, White reckons that 150 million people died in the events that stretch from the First World War—“the war to end all wars”—up to the deaths of Hitler, Stalin and Mao. This combination of all the interconnected events includes the rise of communism and subsequent civil wars in Russia and China, the rise of fascism in Europe and Nazism in Germany, both world wars, the Holocaust, the various purges and famines caused by Stalin and Mao. White calls it the Hemoclysm, from the Greek for “blood flood.” He counts 3 causes of these related mass murders or multicides: technology, ideology and the escalating cycle of violence. Or “Because they could, because they wanted to and because everybody else was doing it.”

Oh and by the way, he writes, “A friend once wondered aloud how much suffering in history has been caused by religious fanaticism, and I was able to confidently tell her 10 percent...” In other words, 90% of mass human killings were committed for reasons other than religion. For instance, economics has accounted for 3 times as many deaths as religion. The economic problems in Germany led to the rise of the Nazis.

White attributes 9 multicides to the Roman Empire, 6 of which were due to Roman conquest and resistance. The Romans conquered all the lands that surrounded the Mediterranean Sea, ruling 50 to 60 million people. The Romans were brutal and efficient. Small wonder that would-be dictators often look to the Roman emperors as models to be emulated. They ignore the fact that 60 to 75% of them died violently. Because the empire was built on violence.

For instance, Pilate was a heavy-handed prefect of Judea. He broke precedent by bringing the military standards, bearing the image of Caesar, into Jerusalem. Jews found this idolatrous and protested at Pilate's palatial estate in Caesarea Maritima. He invited them to the local stadium to discuss the matter and then had them surrounded by soldiers. He threatened to have them killed. The Jews bared their necks and dared him to do so. Declining to start his term with a massacre, he backed down and removed the standards. But he didn't learn much. We are told in Luke about an incident involving some “Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifice.” (Luke 13:1) He did something similar to some Samaritans gathered on Mt. Gerizim, their sacred site. They complained to the emperor and he was removed from office. So I don't think Pilate's treatment of Jesus was due to compassion on his part.

Joseph ben Caiaphas was the longest serving high priest during the time of the New Testament. He was appointed 8 years before Pilate was made prefect. It was a turbulent time and so Caiaphas, son-in-law of Annas, a very powerful former high priest, must have been good at working with the Romans. Notably, nothing is said about his reaction to Pilate's offensive behavior with the Roman standards. It doesn't look like he supported the protests but neither does it look like he supported Pilate. I can see therefore why Pilate would not in turn want to do Caiaphas a favor by executing a man who did not seem to be a threat to the peace but did appear to be a thorn in Caiaphas' side.

In other words, what we see in the gospels' accounts leading up to Jesus' death is a power play between a politician and a religious leader. Both were trying to win out over the other. Neither wanted a riot. Caiaphas was trying to eliminate what he saw as the problem. (John 11:47-50) The fact that the problem was a man who appeared to be sent by God to heal and to preach love and forgiveness was irrelevant to both men.

As we've seen, the last resort for humans when dealing with problems is violence. If we can't get what we want by talking, negotiating, or working together to solve a problem, we lash out. (James 4:1-2) We seek to control others by violence or threats of violence. It works—in the short term. But the problems never really go away. They come back to haunt us. Hitler tried to eliminate the Jews by killing 6 million of them. Today there are 15 to 20 million Jews worldwide. In 1953 the British and American governments engineered a coup to oust a democratically elected Prime Minister in Iran who wanted to nationalize their oil industry. They installed a brutal Shah instead. He was overthrown in 1979 by religious fundamentalists, leading to our current situation. Oh, and in case you haven't noticed, we still have Nazis and fascists, trying for a do over. To paraphrase George Santayana, those who don't learn from history are doomed to repeat it.

But what is the alternative to violence? Or perhaps it is more accurate to say, who is the alternative? Of all the people in our passion reading, it is pretty obvious, though it wasn't at the time. Pilate and Caiaphas seemed to have won. Caiaphas got rid of Jesus and Pilate dodged a formal complaint to the emperor. But just 3 years later both would be removed from their positions. We don't know what happened to either of them after that. In fact, if it weren't for a few mentions in Josephus and an inscription, Caiaphas and Pilate would only be known for their parts in Jesus' death. Pilate is better known than the high priest simply because his name is repeated weekly in the creeds in the phrases “suffered” or “crucified under Pontius Pilate.” I wonder if that was the nightmare Pilate's wife had: that this would be the one thing he would forever be remembered for.

Jesus taught us not to repay evil with evil and he lived that out. (Matthew 5:38-41) He did not strike back when he was hit. (Matthew 26:67; 27:30) He told his followers to put away the sword rather than fight to defend him. (Matthew 26:52) And when Pilate asked him if he was a king, Jesus said that his kingdom did not come from this world and he offered as proof the fact that his disciples were not fighting to free him. (John 18:36) The Roman Empire not only had him crucified but no less than 3 emperors tried to stamp out faith in Jesus through persecution. Yet 3 centuries after the events on Golgotha, a Roman emperor legalized Christianity. 2 millennia later, over 2.4 billion people in the world call themselves Christians, almost a third of the global population.

I wish I could say that all of those who call themselves Christian did in fact follow in his ways. But as we've seen, there are those who think that the kingdom of God is best served through violence. They do not deny themselves, take up their own cross daily and follow him. (Luke 9:23) They do not have the same mind “that was in Christ Jesus, who, though he existed in the form of God, did not regard equality with God as something to be clung to, but emptied himself, taking the form of a slave, assuming human likeness, and being found in appearance as a human, he humbled himself and became obedient to the point of death—even death on a cross.” (Philippians 2:5-8)

As historian Tom Holland points out, the idea that God would die on a cross to save sinful humanity was radical. The Roman Empire was all about strength and glory through winning and defeating your enemies. There was no place for compassion for the underdogs. And Jesus definitely looked as a loser from their standpoint, as well as that of many today. A workman, whose only weapons were his words of good news to the poor and powerless, was executed in the most brutal way by the biggest superpower of its day. Yet today that empire is gone. Their glory is only what we can dig up and reconstruct from the remains, rubbish and ruins they left behind. That man however rose again to life. Jesus took the worst thing we could do to him and turned it into the greatest gift of all, eternal life for all who respond to him in love and faith. His kingdom outlasted the empire. Because you can't kill the Spirit of the God who is Love Incarnate. (1 John 4:8)

The Spirit of the God we see in the crucified and risen Christ lives in the hearts of his followers. Jesus is still active in the words of encouragement and forgiveness and healing, and the works of love and reconciliation that he accomplishes through his followers. They are the ones who know that, as Jesus said, “Whoever does not carry his own cross and follow me cannot be my disciple.” (Luke 14:27) They know that whatever they do to those the world considers losers, they do to Jesus. (Matthew 25:31-46) They know that while we are saved by God's grace through trust in Jesus, we are saved in order to do the good works he has prepared for us. (Ephesians 2:8-10) They know that not everyone who calls Jesus “Lord” will enter God's kingdom but only those who show they really do trust him by doing God's will, despite the difficulties, despite the temptations, despite the risks. (Matthew 7:21-23)

During the bloodiest war ever, there were people who acted nonviolently and saved people at the risk of their own lives. You may have heard of them: Corrie ten Boom and her family, who were sent to a concentration camp for hiding Jews; Raoul Wallenberg, a Swedish diplomat, Chiune Sugihara, a Japanese vice-consul, Carl Lutz, a Swiss consul, and Aristes de Sousa Mendes, a Portuguese diplomat, all of whom issued passports, transit visas, or protective letters to tens of thousands of Jews; the Lados group, who issued fake Latin American passports to 3000 people; Gilberto Bosques, a Mexican consul who helped 40,000 refugees escape Nazi-occupied France; Oscar Schindler, the German industrialist, who hired and protected Jewish workers and made defective products he sold to the Nazis; the network of priests and nuns in Assisi, the hometown of St. Francis, who hid Jews in their monasteries and cloistered nunneries; Irena Sendler, a Polish social worker, who smuggled 2500 children out of the Warsaw Ghetto; Miep Giese and the people who hid Anne Frank and her family and friends; the government officials who deliberately delayed the Germans instituting the Holocaust in Italy through bureaucracy; and the entire nation of Denmark, who refused to let those laws be carried out despite being conquered and even got the Nazis in charge of their country to warn them of upcoming raids. It's sad that our history books make these people less well-known than the mass murderers whom some still revere and imitate.

The names of all the people who fought for their own glory will one day fade from memory. At the end of the history of this world, the name everyone will know will be that of the Prince of Peace, “the name that is above every other name, so that at the name given to Jesus every knee should bend, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.”

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Lord of Life and Hope

The scriptures referred to are Ezekiel 37:1-14, Psalm 130, and John 11:1-45.

The gospels record 35 specific instances of Jesus doing what we would call miracles, and what the gospels call signs. The largest number of these (23) are healings. Among the people he healed were those with leprosy or some skin disease, pain, paralysis, fever, hemorrhage, blindness, deafness, inability to speak, seizures, mental illness, self-harm, kyphosis or a crooked spine, edema, a deformed hand, an inability to walk, and a severed ear. And he healed many others whose specific cases are not discussed in detail. In addition, there are 9 instances in which Jesus showed power over nature, the most famous of which is his feeding of the 5000 with just a handful of fish and loaves, the only miracle mentioned in all 4 gospels. And each gospel reports at least 1 person Jesus raised from the dead, a total of 4 in all.

Today's gospel is about the most famous instance of Jesus doing this. We are told that Jesus loved Lazarus and his sisters. In fact when they send for Jesus, Mary and Martha simply say, “Lord, he whom you love is ill.” In fact, for this reason a few Bible scholars, like Ben Witherington, think that Lazarus, not John, was the beloved disciple mentioned in this gospel. For instance, John's gospel is largely concerned with Jesus' actions in Jerusalem, just 2 miles from Bethany, rather than Galilee, where he spent most of his time. Influential Jews attend Lazarus' funeral and later report Jesus resurrecting him to Caiaphas the high priest. (John 11:45-47) Later a disciple who knows the high priest is able to get into his courtyard during Jesus' trial. (John 18:15) This disciple is unlikely to be a fisherman from Galilee. After all, only Peter is recognized as such by his accent. (Matthew 26:73) The male disciples run away when Jesus is arrested. The beloved disciple is the only male friend of Jesus at his crucifixion. Which would make sense if it was Lazarus, who had been dead and then raised by Jesus. He would probably not be afraid of death anymore and would want to be with Jesus while he was dying. And Jesus commits his mother to his care. (John 19:25-27) This would make sense because Lazarus' sister Mary was able to afford an expensive perfume worth a year's wages. (John 12:1-5) They could take care of Jesus' mother with ease. And finally, while both Peter and the beloved disciple rush to Jesus' tomb after being told it is empty by Mary of Magdala, it is only that disciple who believes when he sees the discarded grave wrappings left behind. (John 20:1-8) He probably thought, “He did it again!”

We've just read the story so there's no need to go over it in detail. There are a few things I want to point out, though. First, while raising the dead to life is always astonishing, the other people Jesus revived had just died. Jairus' daughter passed away while her father was fetching Jesus. The son of the widow of Nain was being taken to his grave. Jews feel it is important to bury their dead the same day, before sunset. So a skeptic could quibble about whether these people were in fact dead or just seemed to be in the eyes of people who were not medically trained. And even today, ever so often we hear of people pronounced dead only to wake up in the morgue or funeral parlor. That happened to a 74 year old Nebraska woman in 2024. And just last year a 12 year old girl was dug out of the rubble of her home in Gaza and pronounced dead, only to be discovered to be alive and in a coma by a Palestinian man searching for his son's body in the same morgue. Unlike the 74 year old, the girl recovered. It happens but it is rare.

Lazarus, however, had been entombed for 4 days. That's 4 days without medical care, food and, crucially, water. He was not only dead, but would have started to stink, as his sister puts it. In other words, decay had set in. Judean leaders might have dismissed Jesus' other revivals of the dead as rumors but this would be undeniable.

Secondly, this chapter contains the shortest verse in the Bible—just 2 words—but one of the most profound. After being told for the second time by one of Lazarus' sisters that he wouldn't have died had Jesus been there, and seeing her and her friends crying, the gospel says, “Jesus wept.” And we have to ask ourselves “Why?” Jesus knew what he was going to do. So what triggered this reaction?

Of course, Jesus was distressed by his friends' mourning. But could he relate to what they were going through? I think so. I think Jesus knew firsthand what the loss of a loved one was like.

Joseph is never mentioned during Jesus' adult life. He was there when Jesus was born. He was there when the family visited the temple when Jesus was around 12. (Luke 2:41-52) But by the time Jesus is an adult, Joseph has disappeared. In fact, when the townspeople of Nazareth are trying to understand how the kid they knew growing up now had such wisdom, they ask themselves, “Isn't this Mary's son and the brother of James, Joseph, Judas and Simon? Aren't his sisters here with us?” (Mark 6:3) No mention of Mary's husband, even in a very patriarchal culture! I think we can conclude that Joseph died. He was after all a tekton, a worker in wood, stone and metal. Even today the rate of fatalities for those in construction is high, especially from falls. It is quite probable that Jesus lost to death the man who raised him, who taught him his craft, who taught him his prayers.

So when he sees his friends crying over their brother, it all comes back to him and he cries as well. And I find that comforting. Jesus knows firsthand what it is to mourn the loss of someone you love. So when we go to him in grief, we know he understands fully how we feel. We can mourn, just not like those without hope. (1Thessalonians 4:13)

Which brings us to my third point: this is where Jesus says, “I am the resurrection and the life.” In the Bible, a key characteristic of God is that he is the giver of life. In the very first chapter of the Bible, God creates the world and fills it with plant, animal and human life. He tells all life to be fruitful and multiply. In the first chapter of John, it says of the Word who was with God and who was God, “In him was life and that life was the light of humanity.” (John 1:4) Later in John, we read “For as the Father has life in himself, so he has granted the Son also to have life in himself.” (John 5:26) And we are told that “The Spirit gives life...” (John 6:63) God is the God who is life and who gives life.

However, in popular imagination, God is a cosmic killjoy, looking for excuses to condemn and smite people. Yet Ezekiel 33 says, “As surely as I live, declares the Lord God, I take no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but rather that they turn from their ways and live.” (Ezekiel 33:11) And again in Ezekiel 18 it says, “For I take no delight in the death of anyone, declares the Lord God. Repent and live!” (Ezekiel 18:32) God is opposed to sin because he is opposed to that which diminishes, deforms or destroys life.

It's obvious that sins like injuring or murdering someone are harmful to life. But so is exploiting other people, which is caused by greed, or oppressing them, which is caused by hatred and fear. The stress of living under such conditions raises risks of chronic disease and early death. Spreading falsehoods about people is also harmful. They can destroy reputations, careers and even lives. The cruelty and bullying we see on social media have driven some, especially young people, to suicide. Propaganda can destroy communities and lead to persecution and warring factions. Sins of omission lead to the neglect of those who need help in life, like the poor, the hungry, the homeless, the sick and the disabled. These things diminish life, deform it and ultimately destroy it.

Jesus worked to enlarge life, restore it, and to give life in abundance. (John 10:10) He healed the sick and disabled. He fed the hungry. He brought good news to the poor and spoke the truth to those in power. And he raised the dead to new life. These are signs. Signs of what? Hope. Jesus brings hope. He can make us and our lives better.

As a chaplain in our jail, I don't see too many crises of faith. I don't see too many people giving up on God. I do see crises of hope. I see people giving up on life, on themselves, on the future. Young people jailed for the first time sometimes worry that they have now screwed up their lives irreparably. Those who have been jailed frequently may feel that they have wasted much of their life being incarcerated. Some older inmates worry that they will die in a jail or prison. For some their hope of a better life dies.

But Jesus is the resurrection and the life. He can revive the hope we thought had died. With Jesus it is never too late. Every second of your life is a second chance. Your past or even your present need not determine your future.

However, it may not be the future you envisioned. Mary of Magdala and the other people Jesus healed had only seen ahead of them a life of pain and suffering, impoverished by not being able to work and excluded from a community who saw the disabled as unclean. They never envisioned being healthy and free of their illnesses and injuries. James probably thought he would have to live with the shame of being the brother of a madman who got himself crucified. He never envisioned being the leader in Jerusalem of the very movement his brother started. Peter and the other disciples thought they would fight and reign with Jesus on literal thrones in a political kingdom of God on earth. They never envisioned a life traveling the world, telling the good news to people of every nation, culture and language. Paul expected to be a respected rabbi who crushed the Christian heresy before it spread too far. He never envisioned being the one who was actually spreading the message of Jesus and being imprisoned for doing so and yet able to say, “For me, living is Christ and dying is gain.” (Philippians 1:21)

Lazarus, lying on his deathbed, saw his life slipping away, his last sight being his sisters, weeping in grief. He never envisioned waking up in a tomb, wrapped up like a mummy, struggling to walk, hearing his sisters scream his name as they tore the linen strips from his body and removed the cloth from his eyes, making the first sight of his new life that of his friend Jesus, now weeping tears of joy.

When we give up hope, we start to die. When we let disease dominate our vision, our lives diminish. When we let our demons dictate our thoughts and actions, our life becomes distorted and deformed. When we let despair destroy our motivation to change things for the better, our lives begin to decay.

Do not let these things have the last word. Do not let them defeat you. Jesus defeated demons, disease, death and decay. He turned death from a dead end into the gate to eternal life. And not an ethereal life on a cloud. He brought Lazarus back fully, body, mind and spirit. Jesus came back both spiritually and physically. He will resurrect us as our best selves, restored to the people God created us to be.

In fact, God will not let the world he created and pronounced good come to an ignominious end. The climax of the last book in the Bible is the resurrection of all of creation. John writes, “Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and the sea was no more. I saw the holy city, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, 'See, the home of God is with humans. He will live with them; they will be his peoples, and God himself will be with them; he will wipe away every tear from their eyes. Death will be no more; mourning and crying and pain will be no more, for the first things have passed away.' And the one who was seated on the throne said, 'See, I am making all things new.'” (Revelation 21:1-5)

A storyteller knows that all endings are false. Stories may end but life goes on. But God tells us that our stories need not end. Life, his life, goes on forever. And if we are joined to him through his Son and have his life within us, our lives go on. Right now, we cannot envision exactly what our new lives will be like. The best attempt to capture it is the last part of the last book of C.S. Lewis' Narnia chronicles. He writes of his characters, “And for us this is the end of all the stories, and we can most truly say that they all lived happily ever after. But for them it was only the beginning of the real story. All of their life in this world and all of their adventures in Narnia had only been the cover and the title page: now at last they were beginning Chapter One of the Great Story which no one on earth has read: which goes on forever: in which every chapter is better than the one before.” 

Sunday, March 15, 2026

3 Dimensional Vision

The scriptures referred to are 1 Samuel 16:1-13, Ephesians 5:8-14, and John 9:1-41.

Most of us noticed this, right? You were in class, looking at a map of the world and you noticed how the part of South America that jutted out from its east coast looked like it should fit neatly into the part of Africa's west coast that retreated inward under its northern bulge. They looked like two puzzle pieces that should fit together. Yet it just seemed a coincidence to the vast majority of geologists for centuries because they knew that continents don't move. And even after mapping the oceans with sonar after World War II and discovering undersea mountain ranges ringing the continents, mountains being continually pushed up by magma beneath earth's crust, geologists still resisted the idea. Because the heads of geology departments and presidents of geological societies were established and held to the orthodoxy of a stable earth. It took decades for the idea of plate tectonics and continental drift to become widely accepted as newer geologists saw the evidence and overturned the older model. I didn't realize that when I took geology in college in the 1970s that what I was taught—that all the continents were once a single supercontinent and that South America and Africa had in fact snuggled together hundreds of millions of years ago—had only recently become the scientific consensus. Humans are simply that reluctant to change their minds, even when confronted with clear and visible evidence.

Today's lectionary texts are concerned with different ways of looking at things. In our passage from 1 Samuel God sends the prophet to the family of Jesse in Bethlehem to anoint one of his sons as the new king. Samuel is impressed by the oldest son who looks tall and regal. But God says, “Do not look on his appearance or on the height of his stature, because I have rejected him, for the Lord does not see as mortals see; they look upon the outside appearance, but the Lord looks upon the heart.” And in the end, the person the Lord had chosen was the youngest brother, David, “a man after his own heart.” (1 Samuel 13:14; Acts 13:22) David becomes one of the greatest kings Israel ever had and Isaiah says that the Messiah will come from his line. (Isaiah 11:1-5)

Now we know that David wasn't perfect. And you may have heard that some people, trying to justify their support for a flawed leader, often point this out. And, yes, David committed adultery with Bathsheba and even sent orders that her husband, Uriah, a soldier, be put in the front lines where he was sure to be killed. But when the prophet Nathan bravely confronted the king with his sins, David repented. He was forgiven but there were consequences for what he had done. (2 Samuel 12:1-14) Contrast this with someone who has said he has never confessed his sins to God or asked his forgiveness and doesn't accept the consequences of what he has done. We are all sinners, including the guy up here with the funny collar. The difference is we know it, acknowledge it, ask God for forgiveness and seek to become better people with the help of his Spirit.

But the main thing we should notice is that God does not judge by outward appearance, while humans often do. Studies have shown that very attractive people are more likely to be hired over ordinary looking people. Experiments have shown that men will stop more quickly to help an extremely good looking woman on the side of the road with car trouble than women who are just normal looking. The taller candidate for president usually wins. Children are more likely to attribute good moral qualities to handsome and beautiful people just from seeing their photos. And the person who was voted class president or most popular in your high school was one of the really attractive kids, right?

And yet we know that it is what's inside a person that is more important. Shakespeare said, “There's no art to find the mind's construction in the face.” (Macbeth Act 1, Scene 4) There is no real connection between how a person looks and how they act. Con men and cult leaders use this and charisma to get people to go along with their schemes. Ted Bundy used his very handsome features to lure women into his car. Yet Harriet Tubman saved a lot of people from slavery, even though she was no beauty queen. Abraham Lincoln grew a beard to give some dignity to his face with its gaunt cheeks, large nose and ears, and deep-set eyes. It's the intangibles—a person's character, trustworthiness, and empathy, the contents of their heart—that count. Everything else is just packaging.

In our gospel the disciples see a man born blind and ask “Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?” (I am assuming the man, a beggar, had a sign his parents made that explained his condition.) When something really bad happens to someone, we all wonder why. Is there something they did to bring it on? Is there something they could have done to prevent it? We do this because (A) we want the world to make perfect sense and (B) we like to think that we are in control of our lives. Maybe we can learn how to avoid a similar fate. And some people, disturbed by the idea that such things may be random, cling to the idea that “everything happens for a reason.” Prosperity gospel preachers say that if you believe hard enough and do the right things (including giving to their ministries) you will be healthy and wealthy. If you don't become those things, it's your fault. Many a person who thought they had some contract with God that granted them immunity to suffering tragedies has had their faith shattered when they discover that bad things can happen to good people. C.S. Lewis went through such a crisis of faith when his wife died. His book A Grief Observed is one of the most honest explorations of wrestling with loss that anyone has ever written. He originally published it under a pseudonym and found to his chagrin that friends often purchased it and gave it to him to help him with his grief.

Jesus resists getting into questions of what someone did to cause this and instead turns to what he can do to help. He doesn't look at the man's condition as a theological problem to be discussed but a practical problem to be solved. He sees this as an opportunity to show God's works of love and mercy and healing. Jesus says, “We must work the works of him who sent me while it is day; night is coming when no one can work. As long as I am in the world, I am the light of the world.” And as the body of Christ in the world today, we must take up his torch and be the light of the world. (Matthew 5:14-16)

Sadly, there are people in this world and even in the church who are more interested in fixing the blame than in fixing the problem. But as Paul says in today's reading from Ephesians, “Once you were darkness, but now in the Lord you are light. Walk as children of light, for the fruit of the light is found in all that is good and right and true.” He goes on to say, “Take no part in the unfruitful works of darkness; rather expose them.” Light can reveal the beauty of the world; it can also expose what's wrong and deceitful and harmful. We may not like to look at such things but they are important to make note of and to warn others about. As Jesus said, “For everyone who does evil deeds hates the light and does not come to the light, so that their deeds will not be exposed. But the one who practices the truth comes to the light, so that it may be plainly evident that his deeds have been done in God.” (John 3:20-21) One way you can tell if a person knows that what they have done is evil is by how much they fight to keep it from coming to light.

Finally, Jesus highlights another way of looking at things. The man born blind is astonished that rather than the religious leaders rejoicing with him about his healing they attack him for pointing out that what Jesus did was good. They are so frozen in their beliefs that they cannot see what is obvious: that this is a sign that God is working through Jesus. Even the man's parents won't speak up for him. The Pharisees drive the man out and when Jesus hears this, he seeks the man out. On seeing the one who healed him, he puts his trust in Jesus. And Jesus says, “I came into this world for judgment, so that those who do not see may see and those who do see may become blind.” Some Pharisees overhear this and say, “Surely we are not blind, are we?” Jesus replies, “If you were blind, you would not have sin. But now that you say, 'We see,' your sin remains.”

Isaiah wrote, “Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil, who replace darkness for light and light for darkness, who substitute bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter.” (Isaiah 5:20, my translation) Again, we see this everyday. We see people commend what is obviously bad as something good and who condemn what is obviously good as something bad. We see people who look at those whose outward appearance is different and think that means they must be bad inside, without any evidence that they have actually done anything wrong. We see folks who watch others do bad things in the name of security and patriotism, like destroying, harming and killing innocents, but somehow think those are good things they can justify and even celebrate. They see evil as good and good as evil. They are morally and spiritually blind.

If this blindness is willful and persistent. it becomes the “unforgivable sin.” The context for this is that Jesus was again healing people and his critics said that he was doing it by the power of the prince of demons. In other words, they saw Jesus doing the works of the Holy Spirit and said he was doing it through the power of a supremely evil spirit. (Matthew 12:24) That's why Jesus says, “Whoever speaks a word against the Son of Man will be forgiven, but those who blaspheme against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven.” (Luke 12:10) Blaspheming against the Holy Spirit is essentially seeing God at work doing something good and seeing it as something demonic and bad.

Why is it unforgivable? For the same reason that a doctor cannot cure someone who thinks the medical profession is a scam and medicine is a hoax perpetrated by Big Pharma. If a patient does not trust doctors, doctors can't help him. We saw this during the pandemic. And if people look at Jesus, who told us to love one another and help to the disadvantaged, deprived, diseased, and despised as if they were him, and they see instead something demonic and evil afoot, if they see empathy as a sin and mercy as a weakness, they will not trust in the God who is love incarnate and thus he cannot save them. They are unforgivable because they will not seek forgiveness. As C.S. Lewis said, the gates of hell are locked from the inside. They are locked against God. Otherwise he might get in and start changing things and even changing people. As Lewis said elsewhere, there are people who say to God, “Not my will but yours be done” and people to whom God will at last say, “Very well; not my will but yours be done. You don't want any part of me. So be it.” Because God is love and love does not do anything to the object of his love without their consent. In the end everyone will get what they desire, Lewis said, but some may not like it when they see what they have chosen.

God gave us two eyes in the front of our face and they allow us to see the world in 3 dimensions. In our readings today we see 3 ways of looking at things. First, we saw that God doesn't judge people by external appearances and neither should we. It doesn't matter what we look like. What matters is whether our hearts are tuned to God and whether we are willing, when we sin, to admit to it and ask God to make us better.

Second, we saw that God does not judge people by conditions that are beyond their control and neither should we. Instead of trying to fix the blame we should seek to fix the problem. God expects us to do what we can to help and heal those who suffer, not make things worse. We are to do what is good and right and true.

Third, we must be clear eyed on what is good and what is evil, and never confuse them. When we find things that harm others or our relationships with them, or our relationship with God, we must not ignore or act willfully blind to them. And when we find dark deeds we must expose them, not cover them up. We must be sensitive to the Spirit, looking for his hallmarks in people and their works. If we see hatred or indifference, despair, discord, unreasonable impatience, cruelty, stinginess in giving others what they need, untrustworthy behavior, harshness or someone out of control, that is not the Spirit of God in action. If we see love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control growing and bearing fruit in someone's life, that is clear and visible evidence that the Spirit is active in them. (Galatians 5:22-23) The pieces fit. And when we see God acting in someone's life, we need to support them.

We live in dark times. But "God is light and in him is no darkness at all." (1 John 1:5) As children of the light, we are to reflect his life and love and truth and healing to the world. We are to act as beacons to bring others out of the darkness. And no matter how long and dark the shadows get, remember: Jesus is the light that shines in the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it. (John 1:5) 

Sunday, March 8, 2026

In Spirit and Truth

The scriptures referred to are Exodus 17:1-7, Romans 5:1-11, and John 4:5-42.

Wheaton College required its students to take at least one summer semester. You could do it on campus, 30 miles from Chicago, sharing its heat and humidity, or you could do it abroad. As a major in biblical studies, I chose the program that took us to Rome, Greece and Israel. While in Israel our guides cautioned us to drink water frequently, even when we didn't feel thirsty. Because there is practically no humidity and your perspiration evaporates quickly and efficiently, keeping you cool but also dehydrating you rapidly. Not being covered in sweat, you didn't realize how fast you were losing water.

You've probably heard the Rule of 3s: you can survive for 3 minutes without oxygen, 3 days without water and 3 weeks without food. These are averages but after air, you need water the most. And they didn't have running tap water in their homes in the days of the Bible. So a source of good, clean water was vital. Towns and cities were built on rivers or lakes, or else had wells or springs nearby. So going to the local well was a good place to meet people. Moses met the woman he married at a well. (Exodus 2:15-16) Usually the water for the day was either drawn early in the morning or early in the evening to avoid the heat of the day. Around noon people would cease their labor, eat lunch and have a nap. And sure enough, when we were in Israel we found that a lot of businesses would close for the afternoon and reopen in the evening.

So it would be unusual for a woman to come and draw her water at noon. Could it be that she was avoiding the other women and people of her town? Whom she does encounter is a stranger. She probably could identify him as a Jew by the blue tassels on the edges of his garment. She ignores him until he does something unheard of: he asks her for a drink. It is scandalous because she is a woman and a Samaritan.

The Samaritans began this way: After Solomon's death, the ten northern tribes broke away from the Davidic kings whose capital was Jerusalem. They chose their own king, declared Samaria their capital and took to themselves the name of the kingdom of Israel, the southern kingdom now being known as Judah. In 722 BC, Israel was conquered by the Assyrian Empire and 20,000 Israelites, mostly the upper classes, were taken into exile. They were replaced by Babylonians, Syrians and others deported from their territories by the Assyrians. They intermarried with the poor Israelites left behind. Eventually they developed their own version of the Mosaic religion and built their own temple on Mount Gerizim. They even had their own version of the 5 books of Moses. For instance, in the Samaritan version of the Ten Commandments, it is required that the faithful worship on Mount Gerizim! The Jews considered the Samaritans to be half-breed heretics. And in 128 BC, the leader of the Maccabees had the temple on Mount Gerizim destroyed. Later some Samaritans scattered bones in the Jewish temple, desecrating it. So the two peoples had no love for one another.

That's why the woman was taken aback. Jews and Samaritans would not share the same drinking vessel. If Jesus drank from something she used, he would be rendered unclean in Jewish eyes. She points this out and then Jesus says that if she asked him, he would give her living water. This was an idiom for flowing water, such as from a spring. It would be superior to well water. But of course Jesus is using a metaphor for the Spirit.

We see this later in John's gospel, when Jesus went to the Feast of the Tabernacles in Jerusalem. A highlight of that festival was the water-drawing ceremony. Priests would draw water from the Pool of Siloam and lead a procession to the temple, where they would pour the water on the altar. This symbolized the prophecy in Ezekiel 47 that waters would flow from the temple. (See also Zechariah 14:8). And John's gospel says, “On the last day of the feast, the greatest day, Jesus stood up and shouted out, 'If anyone is thirsty, let him come to me, and let the one who believes in me drink. Just as the scripture says, “From within him will flow rivers of living water.”' (Now he said this about the Spirit, whom those who believed in him were going to receive, for the Spirit had not yet been given, because Jesus was not yet glorified.)” (John 7:37-39) Jesus is essentially saying that he is now the temple of the Lord, where God dwells on earth.

So Jesus is not talking about water, without which our bodies die, but the Spirit of God, without which our spirits die. This woman desperately wants this living water. And we find out why when Jesus tells her to fetch her husband. She says she doesn't have one. And Jesus agrees with her. She's been married 5 times and the man she was living with was not married to her. This would have been a big scandal in that day and culture. If a woman were widowed 3 times, people would think there was something wrong with her. A woman who had been divorced 5 times would have been shunned. And that's why she was going to the well at noon when everyone else was home staying out of the heat.

And remember, Jesus was not a fan of divorce and remarriage. He considered it adultery. (Matthew 19:9) Some rabbis permitted divorce. Of course only the man could initiate it and he could do it for the most trivial of reasons, like his wife burnt his dinner, or simply because he found someone else he wanted to marry. Jesus had biblical reasons to oppose this (Matthew 19:6) but he may have some personal feelings about it as well. After all, Joseph was considering divorcing Mary when he found out she was pregnant during their betrothal period, which was considered as binding as marriage. (Matthew 1:18-19) Jesus' mother would have been disgraced and may have even been stoned to death as an adulterer had Joseph gone through with the divorce. So what does Jesus do when he encounters this much divorced woman so despised that she avoided the others in her town? He commends her for telling the truth and then drops the subject.

Well, actually the woman changes the subject. The fact that Jesus, a stranger, knows so much about her private life makes her think he might be a prophet. So she switches to talking about the issue of whether God should be worshiped on Mount Gerizim in Samaria or Mount Zion in Jerusalem. But Jesus doesn't go back to her marital history. Instead he says, “But the hour is coming and is now here when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father seeks such as these to worship him. God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth.” Jesus is bringing their talk back to matters of the Spirit.

Let's face it. This is a weird conversation that Jesus is having. Both he and the woman are trying to steer it in different directions. But the most important issue is not running water or repeated adultery or rival worship sites. What is essential is the Spirit. Without it, none of those things have any significance. They are just earthly things and human activities that concern this short physical life. And some people do think such things are meaningless. But the human spirit rebels against meaninglessness. In fact, when someone sees no purpose or meaning in life, they start to die inside. Ask someone in the depths of depression.

And notice that Jesus is implying that even proper worship in Jerusalem is not valid if it is not done “in spirit and truth.” It was in his hometown of Nazareth that he defined what having the Spirit meant. Reading from Isaiah, Jesus said, “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to proclaim the good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and the regaining of sight to the blind, to set free those who are oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor.” (Luke 4:18-19) He stops just before the next phrase in Isaiah, “...and the day of vengeance of our God.” (Isaiah 61:2) Because his mission is not to condemn the world but save it. (John 3:17) Instead Jesus brings the Spirit who produces “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.” (Galatians 5:22-23) That is what the Spirit of God does in your life.

Yet we have all seen people who go to church and go through the motions but do not have the Spirit of Jesus. We daily hear of people who loudly proclaim they are Christians who nevertheless do things that go against what Jesus said about loving your neighbor even if he is a foreigner. (Luke 10:30-37) We see people who don't acknowledge that whatever they do to the poor, the hungry, the thirsty, the sick, the imprisoned and the resident alien they are doing to Jesus. (Matthew 25:31-46) Remember it was the religious leaders of his day who wanted Jesus crucified. (John 19:15) And if Jesus walked into some churches today and preached about turning the other cheek and putting away the sword and how a camel could squeeze through the eye of a sewing needle easier than a rich person could enter God's kingdom, he'd be accused of being woke and marched out of the city and tossed off the nearest cliff as they tried to do in his hometown. (Luke 4:29) And if he offended today's political leaders by saying that God wants us to love our enemies and treat them decently (Matthew 5:43-45), they have him imprisoned, beaten and executed as they did then. Merely saying you are a Christian means nothing if you don't have the Spirit of Jesus in you.

Jesus says we must also worship the Father in truth. What truth is he speaking about? John's gospel tells us in the very first chapter that “grace and truth came through Jesus Christ.” (John 1:17) And Jesus says, “If you continue in my word, you are truly my disciples; and you will know the truth and the truth will make you free.” (John 8:31) So the truth is his message.

But in another sense Jesus is the message. He is the Word who was with God in the beginning and who is God. (John 1:1) He is the Word made flesh. And indeed Jesus says, “I am the way, the truth and the life; no one comes to the Father but through me.” (John 14:6) Jesus is the truth about God, the perfect expression of who God is. People looking for God have only to look at Jesus and in him they will see the God who is both just and merciful, gracious and forgiving, the God who is love, the God who “proves his love for us in that while we were still sinners Christ died for us.” (Romans 5:8)

The Samaritans, like the Jews, were looking for the Messiah. They called him the Restorer. They saw him as the prophet who would come after Moses, as it says in Deuteronomy, “The Lord your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among you—from your fellow Israelites; you must listen to him.” (Deuteronomy 18:15) That's why the woman, overwhelmed by what Jesus is telling her, says, “I know the Messiah is coming” (who is called Christ) “When he comes, he will proclaim all things to us.” And then Jesus says, “I am he, the one who is speaking to you.”

What was it in Jesus' manner that allowed her to even consider that he was who he said he was? What was it in Jesus that convinced her that she could be looking at the Restorer? Was it that he, a man, a Jew, and a righteous one at that, would take the time to talk to her, a woman, a Samaritan with an unsavory past, not about how wrong her nationality was or how wrong her religion was or how wrong her lifestyle was, but about her desire for a God who isn't constricted by such things but who cares about her and wants to fulfill her spiritual needs? And so she runs into town and says, “Come and see a man who told me everything I have ever done! He cannot be the Messiah, can he?” Like the women at the tomb, this woman, whose name we don't even know, becomes a messenger of the good news of Jesus.

Everyday we are hit by a flood of bad news. We see people doing things that Jesus explicitly forbids and saying they are doing it in his name. But what did the real Jesus do? He had the longest conversation the gospels record him having with anyone, with a woman he didn't know, who had a different ethnicity and a different religion and a very different lifestyle, and he didn't call her names, he didn't shame her, he didn't act like she was too stupid to understand spiritual matters. He treated her better than her 5 ex-husbands, better than the townspeople she was avoiding, better than any Jew would ever treat a Samaritan and better than most men would treat a woman in that day and than many even today. She probably occupied one of the lowest rungs in her society, and yet Jesus gave her the good news that the Restorer of all things and the Savior of the world has time to sit with her and is interested in what she thinks and says and invites her to worship God in spirit and in truth and quench her thirst for the Spirit of the God she sees in Jesus, the Spirit who will become in her a spring of water gushing up to eternal life.