The Passion of the Christ
Easter
Sunday, 2016
Isaiah
65:17-25
The
first five Easters of my life as a minister of word and sacrament I served as
an associate pastor in congregations of more than 500 members. Like most women
and men serving in such roles, I longed to preach the high holy day sermons –
Easter, Christmas Eve – the feast days that form the foundation of the story
around which we center the church.
Now,
however, like most women and men who have preached the story each year for a
decade or more, I find myself wondering what else can I possibly say that
hasn’t been said, oh, about 2,000 times before.
In
that state, I’ll confess, I entered Holy Week feeling considerably less than
passionate about the whole thing.
In
a post written about a year before his death, entitled “Easter Again,” the late
theologian Marcus Borg reflected this challenge. He said,
“I sympathize with clergy who preach about Easter to the same
congregation for several years. Of course, you say what you think is most
important the first time.
So what do you say the second time and the third time and more?”[1]
That
got me to wondering what I thought was most important way back when I first
preached an Easter sermon. What was I so passionate about that I saved it up
for that first Easter Sunday here? I certainly don’t remember, and I would be
shocked if anyone who was here in April of 2004 remembers what I thought was so
important on that Easter Sunday.
Anybody
remember? Anybody? Bueller?
I
didn’t think so. On this 13th Easter Sunday I’ve been privileged to
preach here, the fact that no one recalls what I was passionate about in 2004
strikes me as perfectly, wonderfully appropriate.
What
matters on Easter is not what I am passionate about, nor what you are
passionate about. What matters on Easter is what Jesus was passionate about.
Because what Jesus was passionate about is what God was and is and ever will be
passionate about: life – in all of its power and possibility, all of its daring
and diversity, all of its longing and its love.
Jesus
was passionate about life, and about ensuring that all of God’s children,
sprung from the tree of life, might find a place at the table of grace.
It
is, thus, beyond ironic, that the symbol of the movement that grew out of
Jesus’ life should be a reminder of state-sanctioned death. It’s important to
remember that, and thus to remember the passion of the Christ – that is to say,
his suffering and his death. We do not lift high the cross to celebrate or
sanction suffering. We lift high the cross to proclaim that the power of God is
precisely the power of life in the face of suffering and of death.
Easter
is God’s great “yes,” in the face of the powers and principalities that would
have us believe all of the world’s loud “nos.”
“No,”
terrorists and fundamentalists tell us, “It is not possible to have peace.”
“No,”
those who believe that power flows from weapons tell us, “It is not possible to
live without militarized borders and wars without end.”
”No,”
bigots and reactionaries tell us, “It is not possible to have just and diverse
communities.”
“No,”
those who profit from a fundamentally unfair global economy tell us, “It is not
possible to have economic justice.”
“No,”
white privilege tells us, “It is not possible to proclaim that Black Lives
Matter, and it is all the more impossible do something to transform the systems
that reinforce that tragic truth that, for far too long, they simply haven’t.”
“No,”
the talking heads tell us, “It is not possible to have women in positions of
power and authority and to judge them on what they accomplish there, instead of
on whether or not they smile enough to please the men.”
“No,”
the governor of North Carolina tells us, “It is not possible even to figure out
restrooms such that transgender sisters and brother can pee in peace.”
I
bet that if I’d uttered that phrase on that first Easter Sunday here some of
you would still remember it!
What
I hope we remember, though, is that this “yes” vs. “no” is not an opposition of
us vs. them. It’s an opposition, instead, of us vs. God. You see, some of these
voices of negation belong to each of us; all of them belong to some of us.
After all, affluence, appearance, power and profit – these are the idols we worship.
Nevertheless,
all of these things that the world teaches us are impossible – that we teach
ourselves are impossible – are precisely the things about which Jesus was
passionate: peace, love, justice.
One
might cite Elvis here, and ask, “what’s so funny about peace, love, and
understanding.” Costello has always been my personal favorite Elvis.
For
the higher churchers among us, we could cite Michael Curry, the presiding
bishop of the Episcopal Church. The Rev. Curry, in his Easter address, noted
that much of the time we look at the passions of Jesus and conclude that they
amount to “a great hope, a wonderful ideal, but not realistic in a world like
this. Maybe,” he went on, “parts of us … wonder, maybe the strong do survive,
maybe might does make right, maybe you better look out for number one. [… But]
how’s that workin’ out for the world? The truth is, the way the world very
often operates is not working out. It’s not sustainable. It’s not the way to
life.”[2]
The
way to life. The way to life is what the Easter story is ultimately all about.
The way to life, as Jesus’ life demonstrated, is not a way of denial and
avoidance of the broken places of the world, but, rather, a way of engaging
that which is broken and transforming it, a way of finding new life out of the
dust of that which has been destroyed, a way of getting to “yes” when all
around us – and even, sometimes, within us – the world shouts “no!”
From
beginning to end, Jesus’ life was about taking the world’s expectations, and
turning them upside down; of hearing “no,” but speaking an insistent,
challenging, loving “yes!”
In
his first public sermon, according to Luke’s gospel, Jesus took down the scroll
of the prophet Isaiah and read, “the spirit of the Lord is upon me, for God has
ordained me to proclaim good news to the poor, liberty to the captives,
restored sight to the blind, and the year of jubilee to those who live in
debt.” God has called me, in other words, to speak “life” where the world says
“death.”
Isaiah
concluded his prophetic writing with a clear vision that informed and motivated
Jesus from start to finish:
“For I am about to create new heavens and a new
earth; the former things shall not be remembered or come to mind. But be
glad and rejoice forever in what I am creating. … Before they call I will
answer, while they are yet speaking I will hear. The wolf and the lamb
shall feed together, the lion shall eat straw like the ox …! They shall not
hurt or destroy on all my holy mountain, says the Lord.”
This
is the passion of the Christ. May it be our passion as well. On Easter, and on
every other day until all have life, and have it abundantly.
Christ
is risen! Let us rise up as well! Amen.