Repent for the Kingdom
V: Redeeming the Bones: 5th Sunday in Lent
Ezekiel 37:1-14; Psalm 130; Romans 8:6-11;
John 11:1-45
“Dem
bones dem bones dem-a dry bones . . . Now hear de word of de Lord.”
The sermon for this week is a cake-walk for literalists. Ezekiel: “And you shall know that I
am the Lord when I open your graves, and bring you up from your graves
. . . I will put my spirit within you, and you shall live, and I will
place you on your own soil. . . .” John: “Martha, the sister of the
dead man, said to [Jesus], ‘Lord already there is a stench because he
has been dead four days.’ Jesus said to her, ‘Did I not tell you
that if you believed, you would see the glory of God?’ So they
took away the stone . . . [and Jesus] cried in a loud voice, ‘Lazarus,
come out!’ The dead man came out . . . .” Psalm 130: “Out of the depths I cry
to you, O Lord . . . If you, O Lord should mark my iniquities, Lord,
who could stand? . . . I wait for the Lord, my soul waits . . . more
than those who watch for the morning. . . . For with the Lord there is
steadfast love, and with him is great power to redeem. It is he
who will redeem Israel from all its iniquities.” Apostle Paul: “If the Spirit of him
who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, he who raised Christ from
the dead will give life to your mortal bodies also through his Spirit
that dwells in you.”
All we have to do is repent from our post-modern skepticism and sin and
believe that just as Ezekiel raised the army of dry bones in the desert
using God’s command, so Jesus, the son of God, in his most astounding
miracle of all, raised Lazarus from the dead with his own divine
power. God in turn raised Jesus from the dead, and so also will
the spirit of the Christ who is now one with God raise bodily –
physically – those who believe. Those who don’t believe, as
cherry-picked Paul says, “cannot please God. . . . To set the mind on
the flesh is death, but to set the mind on the Spirit is life and
peace.”
Is that really all we need, heading into the denouement of Holy Week
and Easter Sunday?
Very little of Ezekiel is ever included in the Lectionary
readings. Five selections are used in Year A, and three in Year
B. The prophesy about the army of dry bones is used for two of
the five celebrations in Year A: the fifth Sunday in Lent, and
the Easter vigil. It is used again in Year B at Pentecost.
None of these are combined with readings that deal with the subject
that Ezekiel was most concerned about, which is Exile. They are
all used to bolster the Christian interpretation of salvation from hell
through belief in the physical resurrection of Jesus, and the conveying
of the holy spirit upon those who believe.
In the post-modern, post-Enlightenment, post-Christian 21st Century,
these readings are in real danger of being lost to ignorance of what
they may have meant to the ancient Hebrew world and the early Christian
way, and therefore lost to indifference about any prophetic relevance
they may yet hold. But in a world bereft of meaningful metaphor
that reflects current cosmology, Paul and Ezekiel may possibly be
reclaimed. The story about the resurrection of Lazarus is more
problematical. Second Century people were no more likely that
Twenty-First Century people to take such a story as literal truth, but
nonetheless, to put it in contemporary terms, the story of the raising
of Lazarus is perhaps about as useful as Elvis Presley sightings –
except for one word that John’s Jesus says to Martha: I AM
the resurrection and the life. The verb is present tense, not
past or future. The power of Jesus’s message is the certainty of
eternal life here and now, not there and then. That is a weak
point to hang an argument on, even though Marcus J. Borg
does so. “Martha spoke of the resurrection as future, as
‘on the last day.’ Jesus’s response shifts to the present tense.
. . Martha thought of the resurrection as a future event at the end of
time; but Jesus’s response corrects her misunderstanding and speaks of
resurrection as a present reality.” Jesus:
Uncovering the Life, Teachings, and Relevance of a Religious
Revolutionary Harper One, 2006, p. 199. Nevertheless,
Borg is the biblical scholar who has done the research. If the
writer of John’s gospel had Paul’s extraordinary theology to refer to,
all of Jesus’s I Am sayings
have to be about present reality – realized eschatology – and are an
invitation to join him in raising the dead.
Raising the dead is not about bringing back Elvis. Raising the
dead is about returning from Exile.
Millions of people on this Planet are in political, physical, and
economic Exile from homelands, and from the basic needs for human
survival: food, clothing, shelter, education, and medical
care. Millions more are in spiritual or religious exile, no
longer able or willing to suspend disbelief in the premodern gods and
cosmologies that continue to prevail. Still more are in personal
exile from sustainable relationships, estranged from family, friends,
and social networks. Nearly all of us think we are exiled from
the interconnected web of our own biosphere.
For this reason, it is vastly unfair – if not unconscionable – to
cherry-pick Paul’s words from Romans 8 in order to perpetuate the very
misunderstanding that John’s Jesus gently pointed out to Martha.
It is equally unfair to the shamanic experience of the ancient prophet
Ezekiel, whose purpose was to encourage – that is bestow or invoke
courage – on the demoralized Hebrew captives in Nebuchadnezzar’s
Babylon. We in 21st Century United States are no less exiles than
those of the 6th Century B.C.E. from distributive justice, represented
of old by the God of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Jesus, and described by
Jesus and interpreted by Paul as “the Kingdom of God.” God will
act to restore the people to their own land, promises Ezekiel.
God will act to restore distributive justice-compassion, and the writer
of John’s Gospel and the Apostle Paul proclaim that God has acted
through the life and death of Jesus, and continues to act to this day
whenever anyone – believer or not – chooses to accept the invitation.
If the Elves had allowed us to
read to the end of Romans 8, the entire argument for this 5th Sunday in
Lent would have been moot. “[I]n all these things we are more
than conquerors,” says Paul – more powerful than imperial rulers,
because “neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things
present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth, nor
anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the
love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.” The exile is over.
The dead have been raised. The bones of the martyrs to
injustice are redeemed and justified.
Further, if John Dominic Crossan’s
interpretation of Paul’s
letters is correct – or at least on the track – the dry
bones raised by Ezekiel become a metaphor for those who died in the
service of God’s justice; those who died working to restore God’s
distributive justice-compassion to God’s earth, and who themselves
never saw the transformed earth. The army of dry bones is an army
exiled from justice. Fairness demands that if Jesus was
resurrected into an earth transformed into God’s Realm of
justice-compassion, then all the other martyrs who died too soon should
also be raised with him. “But in fact,” Paul writes in 1st
Corinthians 15:20, “Christ has been raised from the dead, the first
fruits of those who have died.” It is the Christ – the
transformed and transfigured post-Easter Jesus – who has started that
general resurrection, which restores justice-compassion to a
transformed earth. The transformation has begun with Jesus, and
continues with you and me – IF we sign on to the program.
This is a far cry from feeling sorry about petty sin, (which is the
dumbed down meaning that most people think “repentance” means); it is
also a very far cry from the deep and unforgivable sorrow that somehow
we are personally responsible for Jesus’s crucifixion (substitutionary
atonement). Petty sin, feeling sorry, even deep sorrow over an
impossible responsibility, do nothing to empower people to radically
change the way we live. Further, when that sorrow is experienced
as “unforgivable,” the whole point of Jesus’s message is overturned.
Finally, there is a fascinating anachronism in John 11:2, if John’s
Gospel is to be read as a chronological narrative: “Mary was the
one who anointed the Lord with perfume and wiped his feet with her
hair.” This only makes sense if John was writing to a group of
Christians who already knew the stories from Mark. Borrowing for
a moment from the readings for Monday of Holy Week (John 12:1-11),
perhaps this time before Holy Week would be an appropriate time to
create a ritual of commitment to follow Jesus into and through the
coming days.
Invitation to Participate in the
Kingdom Community
There is a story in the Gospel of Mark, Chapter 14, about when Jesus
was at Bethany in the house of Simon the leper, as he sat at table, a
woman came with an alabaster jar of very costly ointment of nard, and
she broke open the jar and poured the ointment on his head. . . . Jesus
said, ‘Truly, I tell you, wherever the good news is proclaimed in the
whole world, what she has done will be told in remembrance of
her.’ And what was it that she did? Knowing she would
probably not have the chance to do so if Jesus were executed by the
Romans – which was highly likely – she anointed his body in advance for
burial. So I invite us – in remembrance of her – to anoint one
another as a symbol of our commitment to do what we can to live in a
community of non-violent justice-compassion, knowing that the struggle
never ends.
[Start the oil among the people]
Invitation to the Meal
In Paul’s first letter to the community in Corinth, he scolds them for
falling out of the practice of justice-compassion, and getting
side-tracked by the normalcy of injustice. He reminds the people
that he received from the Lord what he also handed on to them.
Jesus, on the night when he was betrayed by those who were trapped in
the very same forces of injustice that affected the Corinthians, and
all of us, “took a loaf of bread, and when he had given thanks, he
broke it and said, ‘this is my body that is for you. Do this in
remembrance of me.” If the Earth belongs to God, then
participating in God’s distributive justice means a radical denial of
our own self-interest. As we share this bread, we share ourselves
and make no distinction between them and us.
[Start the Bread among the people]
Then Paul says, “In the same way he took the cup also, after supper,
saying ‘This cup is the new covenant written in my blood. Do this
as often as you drink it, in remembrance of me.’” Again, in
case we didn’t get it when he broke the bread, Paul’s Jesus says, the
new covenant – the new partnership with one another in God’s Kingdom –
is written in blood.
[Pour the wine and juice]
Whenever we eat this bread and share this cup, we proclaim our
participation in God’s ongoing, continuing work of justice-compassion
until it is accomplished.
[Start the Wine and juice among the people]