Faith (Not Belief): 5th
Sunday of Eastertide
Part 4 of
Eastertide 2008
1st Peter
2:2-10; Acts 7:55-60; Psalm 31:1-5, 15-16; John 14:1-14
Most
Sunday morning Christians will likely hear the story of the martyred
Stephen’s enraptured vision of Jesus waiting to receive his spirit, and
how – like Jesus – St. Stephen prayed that this sin not he held against
his persecutors. They will associate that story with Jesus’s final
discourse in the Gospel of John, in which he at last reveals to his
disciples who he really is – i.e., the Son of God, who has gone ahead
to prepare a place for us. The message is clear: Faith as belief saves
us from death. The continuing sermon from the writer of 1st Peter
assures the faithful that they are “a chosen race, a royal priesthood,
a holy nation, God’s own people . . . called . . . out of darkness into
his marvelous light.”
But when the entire story of St. Stephen is read, especially the speech
he reportedly made (ignored by The Elves),
which enraged “the Jews” to such an extent that stoning was the only
logical response, we find what amounts to a spiritual assault on the
Jewish religion.
Acts is not history remembered. Nevertheless, it
has traditionally been treated as though it were. The problem is that
the story of Stephen’s arrest claims that the members of the synagogue
of the Freedmen “secretly instigated some men to say, ‘We have heard
him speak blasphemous words against Moses and God.’ . . . [and] They
set up false witnesses. . . .” However, careful reading reveals that
there was no need for false witnesses to prove their point.
For
hundreds of words, the writer of Luke-Acts puts into the mouth of the
character Stephen his version of the story of the Hebrew people from
Abraham through Joseph and Moses. Time after time the writer
(novelist?) changes the details so that the Hebrew people are portrayed
as unwilling to follow God’s law and as routinely killing the prophets.
“[T]his, despite the fact that in the Old Testament . . . there is
hardly a single prophet that the Jews can demonstrably be said to have
killed, not even Moses. But where accusations go, history is no arbiter
of truth.” James
the Brother of Jesus, Robert Eisenman (Penguin Books
1998) p. 442.
In Acts 7:17-19,
Stephen says that the Egyptian king “forced our ancestors to abandon
their infants so that they would die.” Actually, according to Exodus
1:15-21,
the king of Egypt ordered the Hebrew midwives to kill all the Hebrew
boy babies as soon as they were born, but the midwives “feared God;
they did not do as the king of Egypt commanded them.” As a consequence,
“God dealt well with the midwives; and the people multiplied and became
very strong.” Further, Stephen claims that Moses was abandoned by his
mother (Acts 7:19). Every Christian Sunday School child knows that
Moses’ mother was afraid that he would be murdered by the Egyptians, so
when he got too big to be hidden, she built him a little boat out of
reeds covered with mud, and set it afloat. His sister kept a close
watch. By the grace of God, he was found by one of Pharoah’s daughters,
who adopted him, thereby allowing him to become the leader and
liberator of the Exodus story – one of the most powerful of the
foundational sacred stories of world spirituality. See Exodus 2:2-10.
The writer of Luke-Acts does his best to discredit the Jewish people,
claiming that they rejected Moses, and have no authority over the
Temple because “the Most High does not dwell in houses made with human
hands.” With this comment, he indicts Solomon – second only to King
David in greatness –who had built the house of God, and by implication
David himself, who suggested the idea in the first place.
By the
time Stephen gets to his climax (which the Elves have also conveniently
neglected to include in the readings), it is hard to imagine not
picking up the nearest rock and joining the melee. “You stiff-necked
people,” he roars, “uncircumcised in heart and ears, you are forever
opposing the Holy Spirit, just as your ancestors used to do. . . . you
are the ones that received the law as ordained by angels, and yet you
have not kept it.” The members of the synagogue of the Freedmen had
been treated to a diatribe full of insult and false interpretation of
sacred story. This was not some kind of unprovoked assault; St. Stephen
the Martyr had it coming.
These readings from Acts, John, and
1st Peter must not be taken out of the context of the late 1st and
early-to-mid 2nd Century, C.E. The Temple – where the God of Abraham,
Isaac, Jacob, and Jesus lived, had been destroyed; the Holy City
Jerusalem had been sacked; the people of Judea, whether of the Jewish
or other spiritual systems, were scattered. The Jewish religion was
busy reorganizing itself into synagogues in diaspora rather than
focusing on Temple worship. The Christian variation of Judaism was very
busy defining itself as not Jewish, based on sketchy memory and
unreliable oral tradition about what Jesus actually said and did,
interpreted 20 or so years after the death of Jesus by Paul, in the
midst of political battles over authenticity. What eventually emerged
from this cauldron may or may not be useful to post-modern, 21st
Century Christianity.
What is definitely not useful is
romanticized piety about persecution, or political accommodation with
injustice. Stephen is the poster child for the former; 1st Peter’s
letter for the latter. That writer’s metaphor about “living stones” to
be “built into a spiritual house” is at least bad taste, if not
outrageous, when paired with the highly suspect myth of the stoning of
Stephen.
The reading from John Chapter 14 is one of the most
beloved of the entire canon. “Let not your heart be troubled. Believe
in God, believe in me. In my Father’s house are many dwelling places .
. .” These words have been solace for the living and the dying for two
thousand years, especially when combined with the “faith” demonstrated
by Stephen the Martyr. Jesus is God, and all who believe that he rose
from the dead will go to heaven. In addition, one of the most magical
phrases in Christendom is found in verses 13 and 14: “I will do
whatever you ask in my name so that the Father may be glorified in the
Son. If in my name you ask me for anything, I will do it.” The spell
often seems to work: Parking places materialize; cars stuck in
snowbanks are freed; miraculous cures happen against all medical odds.
But it is a capricious God that saves some but not others, blesses some
but not others, answers some prayers, but not all. So many believers
are left wondering where God is, why God does not answer prayer, even
prayer in Jesus’s name. But the laws of physics cannot be disregarded
or overturned. Believers who want miracles that circumvent the physical
laws of the Universe will find this interpretation disappointing and
frightening.
So shall we throw out the entire set of readings? To paraphrase the
Apostle Paul, by no means.
Jesus’s last teaching to his disciples is not about Jesus’s physical
return in an apocalyptic parousia. Instead, John’s Jesus empowers his
disciples to continue the work in his name. Jesus says he is going
ahead into death to prepare a place for his followers. If they believe
him, and trust his words, they will have the same powers he did in this
present life. The place that is prepared, to which Jesus said he was
going, is not a physical heaven above a triple-decker Universe.
Instead, it is a mystery, into which Jesus asks that we have the
courage to follow him. Those powers that are ours if we trust his word
are neither magical, nor metaphorical. Instead, these powers are those
of the profound balance of the natural world. The lilies of the field
are clothed; the birds of the air are fed. Followers of Jesus’s Way,
who trust the vision that Jesus taught, live in Covenant with creation,
not in opposition to it. When we live in alignment with God’s
incredible kingdom, we experience inclusive, distributive,
justice-compassion, and find peace, regardless of the circumstances.
Thus, in partnership with Jesus’s spirit, the Holy Spirit of God/dess,
followers of Jesus’s way have the courage and the strength to continue
the ongoing great work of justice-compassion here and now.