There was a day
last week when I looked at the front page of the paper and thought that the
world had lost its mind. So much public suffering was on display there: the
plane crash in the Ukraine, the Central American refugee children at the
border, the crisis in Gaza, the outbreak of Ebola virus in Sierra Leone., the
200 Nigerian girls still missing after their abduction by Boko Haram. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon summed up
all our feelings when he said, "Too many innocent people are dying."
[Los Angeles Times, July 21, 2014]
On Tuesday, July 29
we will mark the one hundredth anniversary of the start of World War I. I'm
sure to many observers at the time, the world must have seemed to have lost its
mind then as well. Because an
Austro-Hungarian prince had been killed by a Serbian, a series of interlocking
alliances triggered the start of what we have come to call "The Great
War". Russia came to the aid of
Serbia. France came to the aid of Russia. Austria-Hungary called on Germany for
help. England jumped in on the side of
France. The result was a war that lasted 4 years and cost over 20 million
wounded and 16 million killed.
It should not be
lost on us that the war in 1914 started as a conflict among empires. England, France, Russia, Austria-Hungary, and
the Ottomans called themselves empires. Germany was an empire in the making.
The western world got drawn into a cataclysm because of conflicting imperial
ambitions. Everyone at the time wanted
to rule the sea, colonize the developing world, and control both raw materials
and the means of production. The European continent was not big enough to
accommodate all these expansive visions. Hence the Great War.
To us in the 21st
century much of what happened at the dawn of the 20th seems
tragically inexplicable. But a 22nd
century person might be excused for looking at a front page of last week’s
newspaper and thinking the same about us. The passengers on Malaysian Airlines
Flight 17 found themselves caught in a conflict between Russia and
Ukraine. Children are showing up on our
border fleeing violence caused not only by narco-terrorists but also by the
policies of Central American governments.
And Israel, a nation I long admired, has increasingly come to behave
like a turn-of-the-last century colonialist power. Today as then, thoughtful people are
perplexed by the problem of empires that aggrandize themselves with no regard
to the human consequences.
On Sundays this
summer in the church we are reading our way serially through Paul’s letter to
the Romans. Contemporary Bible scholars
have found much in this letter to suggest that Paul was concerned with the
problem of empire. Christianity came to
being amid the dangers and pretensions of imperial Rome. Jesus was put to death
by a Roman imperial state that found his teaching subversive and so politically
dangerous. Paul’s first generation of Christian converts was martyred because
they acknowledged Jesus, not Caesar, as their king.
As our summer reading
of Romans has proceeded, we’ve seen Paul’s critique of empire reach its full
force. Just last week, Paul compared the
situation of Roman Christians to that of Israel in Egypt. As the Jews fled Pharaoh,
so Jesus’s followers can be free of Caesar.
As Christians, we prepare for the coming of Jesus, the true ruler of
whom Caesar is only a parody. We are on a new Exodus, moving from slavery to
freedom. Paul’s Gospel of liberation
finds its ultimate statement in these ringing words that end the passage we
heard this morning:
No, in all these things we are more than
conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that 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. (Romans 8: 37-39)
This is a passage
often read at funerals, so we tend to think of Paul’s subject here as personal
victory over death. Certainly we are
right to hear that: because so many Christians were dying at the hands of Roman
executioners, we must hear reassurance about a life beyond death as part of
Paul’s message. But I believe that he is
even more emphatically proclaiming the Jesus community’s coming final victory
over Caesar. “We are more than
conquerors.” Neither rulers nor powers will be able to defeat us.
What does Paul have
to tell us on this centennial of the onslaught of the Great War? What does he have to tell us about the front
page of our daily paper?
In many ways, World
War I changed the way we think not only about war but also about abstract ideas
like heroism, glory, and honor on the battlefield. Warfare in this war was
brutal and mechanized. Its engagements could hardly be called “battles”. The
poets of previous wars celebrated the mighty deeds of warriors in song. The
poets of the Great War—Wilfred Owen, Siegfried Sassoon, and others—told the
truth about what they saw and experienced in the trenches. Both combatants and
non-combatants suffered and died in unprecedented numbers. The after-effects of
what was then called “shell shock” and we now call post-traumatic stress
prolonged the suffering and death even after hostilities had long ceased.
So the Great War
was a new event in human history, and both poets and theologians tried to
respond to its newness as best they could.
Just as the confident poetry of war died away, so did the confident
liberal Protestantism of the 19th century seem inadequate to the
present moment. All notions of human
progress now seemed to be false. We
weren’t getting better as a species at all. The Great War had revealed a new,
mechanized ferocity in us. Christian thinkers like the great Swiss theologian
Karl Barth and the American Reinhold Niebuhr turned to Paul’s letter to the
Romans precisely to try to understand how a Christian might find meaning in the
wake of such tragedy.
And what those
theologians found when they turned to Romans was Paul’s message to an earlier
generation of Christians who had also struggled to make sense of human
suffering at the hands of a cynical and uncaring imperial state. The range of forces set against us can seem
at times overwhelming, but Paul never gives up hope:
What then are we to say about these things?
If God is for us, who is against us?. . Who will separate us from the love of
Christ? Will hardship, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or
peril, or sword? . . .No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through
him who loved us. For I am convinced that 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. (Romans 8:31-39)
As deep and painful as the effects of the Great War were,
they threw Christians back to the fundamental affirmations of our faith. After the experience of trenches, of poison
gas, of shell shock, we could no longer naively place our faith either in nation
states or in a doctrine of human progress.
We were driven back to first things, to the life and witness, the
suffering and death, to the resurrection of Jesus. “If God is for us, who is against us?” Nothing “will be able to separate us from the
love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
Only a faith grounded in the death and resurrection of
Jesus is adequate to the sufferings of the Great War. And only a faith so grounded can help us
endure and understand subsequent tragedies: the concentration camps, Hiroshima,
Vietnam, genocides in Cambodia, Bosnia, and Rwanda, the new advent of terrorism
and oppression. If we want to understand what happened in the trenches, if we
want to understand what is happening in Gaza, at our own border today, we need
to look to the imperial Roman cross on which Jesus died and at the empty tomb
from which he rose. The God we know in
Jesus knows what it is to suffer as we do.
The God we know in Jesus also knows what it is to live a new and risen
life on the other side of that suffering.
God is with us because God has been there. We are not alone. We are loved and known and held by one who continues
to go through all of life’s struggles with us.
What Paul says to the Romans and to the survivors of the
Great War, Paul also says to you and me both individually and in community. People will always be expendable to
empires. We will always be capable of
treating each other cruelly. But even in
the midst of experiencing that disregard and that cruelty we can find seeds of
hope and grace and compassion. Put not your faith in empires. Put your faith in the one who triumphed over
all that empire could bring to bear. We are not alone: not in the trenches, not in the camps, not on
the border; not in our prisons, our sickbeds, or in the loneliness of our own
rooms.
For I am convinced that 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.
Amen.
1 comment:
Dean Hall: Great sermon as usual....the analogy of history and today's burning issues was well put together. As individuals and as a group, we still have a a long way go to make this world a better place to live.
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