RECOGNITION: 3rd
Sunday in Eastertide
Acts 2:14a, 36-41; 1 Peter 1:17-23; Luke
24:13-35; Psalm 116:1-4, 12-19
Part 2 of Eastertide 2008
These Year A Eastertide readings cover all the traditional Christian
faith bases: deliverance from death, salvation from sin through
baptism, deliverance from sin by blood ransom, and recognition of the
risen Christ in the breaking of bread. For post-modern exiles,
who want to commit to the work but reject the traditional
fall-redemption theology as preached by the writers of Peter’s First
Letter and Luke-Acts, the time might be better spent looking at how the
early followers of Jesus’s Way recovered from a devastating set back,
and what happened to Jesus’s original ideas. Also appropriate may
be to consider whether and how the foundational rituals of baptism and
communion might be reclaimed so that they can continue to define a 21st
Century church that is faithful to the original – that is, to a Way for
living life in the spirit that is not obscured by Greco-Roman
philosophical overlays from the 1st and 2nd Century (and earlier); or
the political accommodations of the 4th Century and later; or the
guilt-ridden, often blood-soaked, theories of substitutionary atonement
and original sin.
The reading from the First Letter of Peter reinforces the apostle
Peter’s suggestion for gaining salvation from sin. Most
Christians have no idea that the community described in Acts was
founded in Jerusalem shortly after Jesus’s death, but the community
described in the First Letter of Peter likely was founded 50 or more
years later. Most 21st Century folks in the pews on Sunday
morning are not going to make a distinction between the two Peters
unless their ministers make it a point to do so. Once the point
is made, the genie is out of the jug. Luke-Acts was not created
until around the same time as the First Letter of Peter, if not even
later, and perhaps well into the 2nd Century. Given that
timeline, it is debatable whether the theology of salvation through
baptism or the theology of blood ransom through Jesus’s death was
actually suggested by Jesus, or by Simon Peter. The argument is
whether or not Jesus accepted John the Baptist’s apocalyptic call for
repentance. I have chosen the side that argues “no.”
Unfortunately, the reading from Acts picks up where we left off last
week, repeating the end of Peter’s sermon, once more reminding “the
Jews” to whom he was preaching that “this Jesus whom you crucified” was
God’s Messiah, sent by God to restore God’s justice. This Peter
then revisits John the Baptist’s legacy, and insists that the only way
for “the Jews” to save themselves from “this corrupt generation” was to
repent and be baptized in the name of that same murdered Messiah.
The writer of Luke-Acts reports that “about three thousand persons were
added” to the community that day. Assuming (which historically,
we cannot) that this happened 50 days after the death of Jesus
(Pentecost), his original message of radically inclusive love and
liberation from injustice apparently never made it out of the tomb.
All is not lost, however.
Of all the appearance stories in the Gospel accounts, Luke’s story
about Cleopas and his companion (his unnamed wife?) who meet the risen
Jesus on the road to Emmaus may be the favorite. The Elves
recommend it to be read every year, when the main Easter service
includes a Eucharist on Easter day. In Year A, the story is also
included in the readings for this Third Sunday of Easter. In
Luke’s story (and it is only Luke’s story), the Greek idea about fate
being determined by God is put into Jesus’s words: “Wasn’t the Anointed
one destined to undergo these things and enter into his glory?”
Luke says, “Then, starting with Moses and all the prophets [Jesus]
interpreted for them every passage of scripture that referred to
himself” as a proof. But Cleopas and his traveling companion are
still so “slow-witted” – as Luke puts it – that they do not recognize
the risen Jesus until he shares bread with them.
If anything in these readings can be reclaimed for post-modern minds,
it is this story. Theologies of fall-redemption, ransom, and
substitutionary atonement no longer work, nor does proof-texting about
Old Testament prophecies coming true hundreds of years later.
What works is what Jesus did for the travelers on the road to
Emmaus: Hands-on, present moment action that reminded them what
they were supposed to be doing. Review of tradition and history
is very useful. Revisiting the prophetic voices of the Old
Testament such as Amos, Jeremiah, and Isaiah can help post-modern 21st
Century Christians recall that the veil between the worlds of God’s
realm of distributive justice-compassion and the normalcy of human
desire for retributive systems is breached whenever anyone acts in
partnership with God to restore the balance.
The metaphor is the shared meal. Of course Luke’s story is meant
to be a miracle story about a mystical appearance by the risen Lord,
who is only recognized when he breaks bread and passes it to the
travelers. They remember that the last time he did that for them
was the Passover meal, which – like others Jesus shared – was forever
transformed. Jesus is reported in all the gospels getting into
trouble because he ate and drank with “sinners” – usually defined as
tax collectors and other collaborators with the Roman occupiers – but
his table was inclusive of all who were trapped in a system from which
there was no escape. With his institution of the “Last Supper,”
the old covenant secured by Moses was replaced by the new covenant,
sealed with the blood of the Messiah.
21st Century exiles from any of the religions of the Book, but
especially exiles from Christianity, no longer resonate with the
metaphor of blood sacrifice that reconciles the relationship between
God and humanity. The idea that Jesus’s death is a sacrifice
required by God as substitution for the death of sinners, or that
Jesus’s blood is somehow a ransom paid to liberate sinners from hell
makes no sense in a post-enlightenment, non-theistic age.
Instead, the communion meal offers post-modern, liberal Christianity a
commemoration of both liberation from ancient political oppression and
deliverance from injustice for all time. The shared meal is not a
guilt-induced volunteer stint at the local soup kitchen (although
whether inspired by guilt or not, the soup kitchens can use the
help). The meal shared and recognized on the road to Emmaus
starts with radical fairness: redistribution of access to power
and wealth so that poverty and the conditions that cause poverty are
eliminated; negotiation from the standpoint of a radical abandonment of
self-interest to reverse hundreds of years of revenge and retribution
among families, neighborhoods, governments, and nations.
Finally, in a post-modern, 21st Century, where a non-theistic, kenotic
God is present wherever life and justice are present, we can still join
the psalmist who praises the God who delivers us from injustice and
death. “For you have delivered my soul from death, my eyes from
tears, my feet from stumbling. I
walk before the Lord in the land of the living. I kept my faith.
. . .’”