“RE” Words: Redemption





Ephesians 1:1-12
April 22, 2012

Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.
Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, just as he chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world to be holy and blameless before him in love. He destined us for adoption as his children through Jesus Christ, according to the good pleasure of his will, to the praise of his glorious grace that he freely bestowed on us in the Beloved. In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of his grace that he lavished on us. With all wisdom and insight he has made known to us the mystery of his will, according to his good pleasure that he set forth in Christ, as a plan for the fullness of time, to gather up all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth. In Christ we have also obtained an inheritance, having been destined according to the purpose of him who accomplishes all things according to his counsel and will, so that we, who were the first to set our hope on Christ, might live for the praise of his glory.

Back in 1991, I was given a great privilege—something I consider to have been a great honor.  I was asked by a young woman named Ronda to listen to her for her 5th step.  I don’t know if you understand what this means.  She was involved in a 12-Step program as part of her recovery from alcohol addiction, and she wanted me to listen to her confession as she completed the 5th step of the 12-step program she was working. 

I had gotten to know Ronda over the previous three years.  She had been part of our youth group in the church I was serving as an associate pastor.  Her attendance had been pretty steady when she was in the 10th grade, but as she moved through her 11th and 12th grade years it became spottier.  In the fall of her senior year, her parents spoke with me about their suspicions that she had an addiction.  Knowing that I had a background as a drug and alcohol counselor, they wanted my help in figuring out what to do about their daughter.  I told them what I’ve told others:  that there are no easy solutions until the addict recognizes the problem.  I pointed out some things they could do to ensure that they weren’t being co-dependent, encouraged them to become part of Al-Anon (a program for families of addicts), and to prepare themselves for the day when Ronda was ready to do something about her addiction.

In many ways Ronda was just like many teens.  The drinking and drug culture was very much a part of the high schools in 1989, just as they were when I was a teen in the 1970s, and just as they are today.  For many years teens have faced significant pressure to party.  Their friends encourage them, saying, “Just try it.  It’s fun.  Nothing bad will happen to you.  You’ll love it.  You’ll feel so good.”  Once the drinking starts, there is a lot of fun, but that fun masks the dangers.  Abuse of alcohol, and especially addictions, slowly sap life out of people.  All that fun for those with a predisposition to addiction has a price, and the price is the ripping apart of families, friendships, and life. 

Ronda attended the University of Pittsburgh in the fall of 1990, and her life quickly fell apart.  She immediately found the partiers, but now, free of her parents, she was able to devote her full attention to her addiction.  Her grades not only suffered.  They barely registered.  She was losing everything, and in the late fall of 1990, she admitted to her parents that she had an addiction and needed help. They were ready.  Ronda went into rehab, and afterwards started attending Alcoholics Anonymous meetings.  Through AA she started working the 12-Steps. 

Most of us have heard about the 12-Steps, but few who haven’t either worked them, or haven’t been in a relationship with someone who has, understand what they are.  The 12-Steps are a brilliant program that basically restores people to sanity through spirituality.  They help the addict turn over her or his life by looking for God, and then doing the work that allows God to lead her or him to a better way of living.  Here are the 12-Steps, along with some commentary by me: 

1.    We admitted we were powerless over alcohol - that our lives had become unmanageable.

2.     Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.

3.    Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood Him.

v These first three steps are very similar to the Christian idea of “metanoia” or conversion.  In the Christian idea, we recognize the full extent of our sin, we recognize that Christ wants to save us, and we turn ourselves over fully to Christ.

4.    Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves.

5.     Admitted to God, to ourselves and to another human being the exact nature of our wrongs.  (We’ll come back to this)

6.    Were entirely ready to have God remove all these defects of character.

7.    Humbly asked Him to remove our shortcomings.

8.    Made a list of all persons we had harmed, and became willing to make amends to them all.

9.    Made direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others.

v This is a very difficult step.  The addict goes back to everyone whom they have hurt and basically ask forgiveness.  Included in this is that we physically do things to rectify the harm we’ve done in our past.

10. Continued to take personal inventory and when we were wrong promptly admitted it.

11. Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God as we understood Him, praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry that out.

12. Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these steps, we tried to carry this message to alcoholics and to practice these principles in all our affairs.

When Ronda asked me to help her with the 5th step, she simply asked me to sit and listen to her talk about her life.  She had done a deep exploration of everything she had done to hurt herself or others through her addiction, and was willing to share it with God and me. It is a real honor to listen to something like this, as painful as it is.  I’ve had the honor of participating in a 5th step with 6 people over the past 20 years.  Few of us, outside of working the 12-Steps, would ever make this kind of searing confession to another.  Ronda did, and it became the background for dramatically transforming her life. 

Do you know what Ronda was really doing with the 12th steps?  It has a connection with our passage for this morning.  She was doing the work she needed to do to let God redeem her life.  She wasn’t waiting for some miracle to take away the urge to drink.  Every once in a while I hear of people who say that they prayed for God to take away the addiction, and “poof!” the desire to drink goes away.  That’s not the way it is for the vast majority of drug or alcohol addicts.  Most have to do hard work to get their lives back.  They have to do very hard work to create a space for God to enter into their lives. 

Ronda was painfully and actively changing her life, step-by-step, to create a whole new life.  And a large part of her redemption was re-establishing a connection with God by, in a sense, “buying back” her life. 

I don’t know if what I just said to you made much sense—that Ronda had to “buy back” her life.  It might not, but buying back our lives is at the core of the Christian idea of redemption.  The word “redemption,” which we typically think of as meaning that we are lifted up and restored to life, actually has a deeper meaning.  It comes from the Latin word “redimere,” which literally means “to buy back.”  The original use of the word meant that when we lose something we often have to buy it back.  For example, it was used in the ancient practice of slavery. 

In Roman times, people could be enslaved for one of two reasons.  Either they were people conquered by the Romans in a war and brought back to be slaves; or they were people who fell so deeply into debt that they were made slaves.  Unlike the slaves of American history, slaves in the ancient world could actually buy back their freedom, either through their family or tribe paying a tribute to the slave owner, or through the slave actually earning money to buy back his or her freedom.

Going back 2000 years ago to the Jewish faith, and their understanding of life with God, buying back through redemption was very much a part of their faith. The ancient Jews (as well as the Greeks and Romans) understood life as having basic economical principles.  The Greek word for economy was oikonomoor “oikonomos.”  The word wasn’t used the way we use it today.  Traditionally oikonomos meant the “managing of a household,” which typically was managed by a slave.  If the slave managed the household well, he could buy his freedom, but if he didn’t manage it well, he could lose his life.  For example, there was an incident about the time of Jesus when Caesar Augustus was at the home of a wealthy man, who had a pool in the middle of his dining room filled with electric eels.  He kept it there as a reminder to his slaves to be mistake-free.  During dinner a slave dropped a precious crystal wine goblet.  The master threw the slave into the pool of eels.  Augustus was so appalled at this that he commanded that the wealthy man himself be thrown into the pool. 

Anyway, the Jewish and Greek understanding of a relationship with God, or the gods, was that if we managed the household of our lives poorly, and let it deteriorate or fall apart, we lost it.  To restore our lives, we had to pay to get it back in shape.  In other words, God was not going to subsidize our lives freely.  For both the ancient Jews, and the Greeks and Romans, buying back life meant making temple sacrifices.  Temple sacrifices were central to Jewish life.  Once a year every Jewish man and woman was expected to go to the temple in Jerusalem and sacrifice a pure, unblemished goat, lamb, or dove.  That would “buy back” her or his purity for a year.  But, of course, immediately the sin would accumulate, requiring another redemption, or buy back, the following year. 

Christianity teaches that because this system of sacrifices was imperfect, and couldn’t lead to permanent redemption, God wanted to get rid of the system forever.  God wasn’t satisfied with these sacrifices.  God wanted a relationship with us that got rid of the focus on sinfulness forever.  So Jesus was a perfect sacrifice that obliterated the need for temple sacrifice, whether it was Jewish, Greek, or Roman sacrifice.  In effect, Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross was the sacrifice of the perfect man.  It was a sacrifice of God on the cross, who permanently bought back our lives by being a willing sacrifice.  There was a price that Jesus had to pay to be the perfect sacrifice.  He bought back our lives with his faith, selflessness, love, and willingness to be killed  for us.  He paid a price that we couldn’t afford, and his sacrifice ended the sacrificial system for those willing to follow him.  This is a redemption that lasts forever by restoring our relationship with God from God’s side.  That doesn’t mean that we don’t harm the relationship from our side.  There are times when we need redemption in a practical sense, even if Jesus redeemed us permanently in a salvation sense.

It’s hard for us to truly understand this idea of sacrificial redemption because we’ve never lived under a religious system where yearly sacrifices were made.  The ancient Jews, Greeks, and Romans lived under this kind of system. They understood it in their bones.  For converts to Christianity, this theology of redemption made perfect sense because it meant they no longer had to live under this sacrificial religious “economy.”  They were free because of Jesus’ sacrifice. 

Just as I said on Easter, that resurrection isn’t just about the cross, but about how our lives can be resurrected, redemption isn’t just about Jesus paying the price for our debt on the cross, but about how we also can “buy back” our lives when we’ve damaged them.  Despite the understanding that Jesus has redeemed us from sin permanently in terms of God’s role in our lives, that doesn’t mean that we don’t do things that harm our lives and require redemption.

Whenever we misuse or abuse our lives, there’s a price to pay to get our lives back in order. God doesn’t want us to make an animal sacrifice.  God wants us to make the kind of sacrifices Ronda made in her life.  God works on the barter system, and wants actions from us that restore our lives.  The prophet Micah spoke about this kind of sacrifice more than 600 years before Jesus.  He recognized that the Jewish system of temple sacrifices really wasn’t what God wanted. So Micah said to the people of his day, “With what shall I come before the Lord, and bow myself before God on high? Shall I come before him with burnt offerings, with calves a year old? Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams, with ten thousands of rivers of oil? Shall I give my firstborn for my transgression, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?” He has told you, O mortal, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?”  (Michah 6:6-8)

The word, “justice,” above really isn’t a good translation of that word.  We think of justice as the law and just punishment.  For the Jews, justice meant a kind of “rightness.”  It meant that we live rightly with others in all ways:  the rich care about the poor, the king cares about the subjects and vice versa, we live in a right way according to God’s law, etc…  Micah was saying, 650 years before Christ, that God doesn’t want a sacrifice of animals to redeem our lives.  The price God requires is that we humble ourselves before God, recognizing that our lives were unmanageable and that God wants a different way. God wants us to live in kindness towards others so that we restore relationships with them.  And God wants us to live in a kind of rightness where everything fits together again.  Sounds a lot like the 12-Steps. 

Let me take all of this stuff I’ve been talking about and wrap it up for you.  What the idea of redemption means is that it doesn’t matter what happens in our lives—what we do or what is done to us—redemption is always possible.  God always offers a new life to us, but we have to buy it back with how we live.  We can’t buy it back with money.  We have to buy it back with rightness, kindness, and mercy. Ronda bought her life back through this kind of hard work.  We buy ours back through hard work of reaching out for God, prayer, faith, sacrifice, and “rightness.” We can’t take shortcuts. 

A member of our church once told me about how he had to learn this lesson of no shortcuts when he was in drug rehab.  He said that in the rehab center they had white lines painted on the floor, creating a path that meandered through the facility.  To walk anywhere in the facility, you had to stay on the path between the white lines.  If you stepped out of them, you could be kicked out of the program.  So, in going into the cafeteria, for example, you had to follow the path, which entered the room, stayed along the wall, and took a circuitous route to the food.  It was teaching the patients to take the right path, even if it was harder.  They were learning redemption.

Keep this idea locked away in your mind, heart, and soul for when you really need it.  Your life may not be in trouble right now, but at some point it may end up in trouble because of choices you’ve made or will make.  When you get there, remember that God is always there, waiting to redeem you.  The question you have to answer is whether you’re willing to do the work to be a part of that redemption?  Are you willing to do the work of buying back the way to a life with God?

            Amen.