Parousia – The Coming
of the Lord – Part 3: Year A, Proper 26
Joshua 3:7-17; Micah 3:5-12; Psalm 107:1-7,
33-37; Psalm 43; 1 Thessalonians 2:9-13; Matthew 23:1-12
This series of essays on Parousia relies
on the 2004 work by John Dominic Crossan and Jonathan R. Reed, In Search of Paul
(Harper SanFrancisco, 2004), specifically pages 124 through 177.
What must be acknowledged is that Crossan’s interpretation of the
Apostle Paul’s theology as revealed in his authentic letters can be and
is debated among Christian scholars and theologians. That said,
Crossan’s argument points the way for a transformation in Christian
thought that matches the post-modern, 21st Century intellect.
Serious thinkers are not interested in a spirituality that finds its
meaning outside the boundaries of the known Universe – evidenced by the
“brain drain,” as disillusioned Christians take their minds anywhere
but Church on Sunday mornings.
The cherry-picked portion of Paul’s letter to the Thessalonians seems
at first glance to hardly be relevant to how Christianity might change,
and thereby avoid the death foretold by John Shelby Spong. Paul is
reminding his readers how difficult the work was in their
community. “Night and day” – 24/7 – toiling to save sinners:
“pleading that you lead a life worthy of God. . .” So often
leading a “life worthy of God” means following the 10 Commandments,
marriage between a man and a woman, no sex outside of that marriage,
and recently in the U.S., the right to keep and carry guns of all
varieties, and to do as we please with our property – financial,
commercial, agricultural, or personal.
But Crossan suggests that is about as far from what Paul and the
community in Thessalonika were doing as one can get. Paul’s
message to the communities he founded around the Mediterranean was that
Jesus died because he preached a kingdom/realm of justice-compassion
ruled by a God – even a kenotic God
– whose distributive, radical fairness directly challenged Roman
imperial theology. The 24/7 “labor and toil” that Paul and his
companions engaged in was the highly dangerous project of preaching
that same message and the absolute necessity of encouraging and
supporting the members of the community to live the radical denial of
self-interest that a serious acceptance of Jesus’s message
entailed. The “God who calls you into his own kingdom and glory”
was not Cesar; therefore not only preaching such a life and such a God
was – as Crossan says – high treason. Living such a life meant
signing onto a continuing subversion. Martyrs were made.
In those circumstances, the only hope was a hope for vindication upon
the return (parousia) of the
Christ. Here’s where after 2,000 years of dogma, the Christian
train is in danger of permanently leaving the track.
“Notice Paul’s use of . . . technical terms for visitation and
reception. He uses parousia for
'our Lord Jesus at his coming'
in 1 Thessalonians 2:19, 'the coming
of our Lord Jesus with all his saints' in 3:13, 'the coming of the Lord' in 4:15, and
'the coming of our Lord Jesus
Christ' in 5:23. . . . That metaphor controls the entire discussion.”
In Search of Paul, p. 168
(emphasis in text). Two of the above verses are left out of the
readings cherry-picked for the next couple of weeks by our intrepid Elves. But it is important
to read the entire letter, not just the portions selected to emphasize
the meaning agreed-upon by Christian Church organizers, who ended up
collaborating with Empire, not disarming it.
Paul's writing about God calling folks into his kingdom, and the Christ
coming again in glory, were the second and third counts of high treason
that could be charged against him. Only the Emperor came as
parousia – as procession, as visitation, as establishing and confirming
his power over everything from coins to buildings to economies, to
military control. The metaphor will be complete when Paul (and
the Elves) gets to what happens along the parousial route into the City
on the part of the Emperor, and into a transformed world on the part of
the Christ. For now, Paul’s point is to bolster the courage of
his people in the continuing struggle for distributive justice and
peace.
The other suggested readings for this Sunday – often celebrated as
Reformation Sunday and the Feast of All Saints – are not irrelevant to
this discussion. Setting aside Paul’s essay on the struggle to
reestablish God’s realm of distributive justice-compassion, illustrated
by the profound difference between the coming of the Emperor and the
Coming of the Christ, we still have the call to Covenant.
Joshua’s credentials as the successor of Moses are established as the
story-teller’s great leader motif continues. Not to press the
metaphor too far, but the entrance of the Ark – the Presence of the
Hebrew God – into the promised land resonates with the parousia of an earthly
Emperor. The very elements of the natural world stand back in
reverence when the priests’ feet touch the waters of the Jordan River.
But the march of the normalcy of civilization into retributive systems
soon overtakes the best intentions of God himself. Some unknown
hundreds of years after the arrival of the Hebrew people in Palestine,
Micah – an 8th Century BCE prophet of the common people, not the
intelligentsia – condemns Jerusalem and its rulers and prophets for
their injustice. A millennium later, Matthew’s Jesus begins a
series of condemnations of corrupt “scholars and Pharisees,” who only
pretend to abide by Mosaic law. Matthew’s diatribe is against the
same kinds of prophets and rulers that Micah prophesied about.
Matthew is defending his own fledgling community, under increasing
threat from the equally endangered Jewish community, whose central home
has been destroyed. The danger of losing any connection to
Covenant, non-violence, distributive justice-compassion, and peace is
great on both sides. Matthew seems to be erring on the side of
exclusive piety: Only Jesus can be called “Rabbi,” he
maintains. With Jesus, the prevailing order will be reversed:
“Those who promote themselves will be demoted” and vice versa.
Matthew seems to have forgotten what he earlier reported Jesus had said
about the way to counter the fear that he and his community were
facing. Serendipitously, one of the readings for the Feast of All
Saints in Year A is Matthew 5:1-12: “Congratulations
to the poor in spirit! Heaven’s domain belongs to them.
Congratulations to those who grieve! They will be consoled.
Congratulations to the gentle! They will inherit the earth.
Congratulations to those who hunger and thirst for justice! They
will have a feast. . . .” Do not be afraid of persecution,
because you belong to the realm of God – the Kingdom of distributive
justice-compassion – Heaven’s domain. All you have to do is trust
it – like the birds of the air and the lilies of the field.
If anyone needs an example of how dangerous that message is for today’s
followers of the Christian way – or anyone who works to establish
distributive justice-compassion as the grounding for human societies –
we only need to consider the words of Sarah Palin, the Republican
nominee for Vice President. She defined the parts of the
country that would vote for her and McCain as “pro-America,” leaving
the obvious conclusion that anyone outside of those areas, who might
prefer the Democratic ticket, is “anti-America.” Crowds in Palin’s and McCain’s rallies
have called for Barack Obama’s death.
Indeed, one of the many threats against him in the last
week before the election was serious enough to result in FBI arrests
and media coverage.
Readers might argue that this is “politics.” But – inflammatory
reports notwithstanding – Barack Obama comes from a Christian tradition
that is steeped in distributive justice, civil rights, and liberation
theology. Right-wing Christians are the ones supporting the
Republican campaign, and encouraging piety, war, and victory as
prerequisites to peace. Once again, “Christianity” – as it is
defined broadly by the media – has aligned itself with Empire.
But before liberal Christians claim Elijah’s righteous mantle, strike
the Potomac waters, and begin the triumphant parousia into world power,
pay attention to Paul’s words to the Thessalonians: “. . . [W]e dealt
with each one of you like a father with his children, urging and
encouraging you and pleading that you lead a life worthy of God, who
calls you into his own kingdom and glory.” Micah spells out what
the normalcy of civilization looks like: “Its rulers give judgment for
a bribe, its priests teach for a price, its prophets give oracles for
money; yet they lean upon the Lord and say, ‘Surely the Lord is with
us.’”
As Matthew’s Jesus said, as he sent his disciples out “like sheep to a
pack of wolves . . . you must be as sly as a snake and as simple as a
dove” (10:16).
So Vote,
and stay awake. The fall out of Covenant and into Empire comes
like a thief in the night.
By the time the warning sounds, it will already be too late.
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