Who Were These Guys? Judas

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Matthew 27:1-8

May 25, 2014



When morning came, all the chief priests and the elders of the people conferred together against Jesus in order to bring about his death. They bound him, led him away, and handed him over to Pilate the governor. When Judas, his betrayer, saw that Jesus was condemned, he repented and brought back the thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests and the elders. He said, “I have sinned by betraying innocent blood.” But they said, “What is that to us? See to it yourself.” Throwing down the pieces of silver in the temple, he departed; and he went and hanged himself. But the chief priests, taking the pieces of silver, said, “It is not lawful to put them into the treasury, since they are blood money.” After conferring together, they used them to buy the potter’s field as a place to bury foreigners. For this reason that field has been called the Field of Blood to this day.



            Other than maybe Hitler, has there ever been anyone more evil than Judas? Maybe you can throw in a few others like Joseph Stalin, Mao Tse Tung, or Pol Pot, or your favorite serial killer, but do we consider what they did as being as bad as betraying God? Judas will certainly go down in history as the biggest betrayer ever. Who could surpass an evil like turning Jesus over to the authorities so Jesus could be arrested and eventually crucified?



            Actually, the tragedy of Judas’ life is that what he did might not have been an act of evil, but an attempt at good. But we don’t think about Judas as a man of good. And because we don’t, it’s hard for us to dig through what we know about him to discover what we don’t know about him.



            The reality is that Judas is an enigma, a mystery man. The Bible tells us how he betrayed Jesus, but it never really tells us why. And we often don’t ask why. The irony of Judas’ betrayal is that the best biblical scholars believe that he did it to try to help Jesus, not harm him. What the Bible also doesn’t tell us is that before Judas betrayed Jesus, the two of them probably had long talks, and even longer arguments, over what Jesus’ purpose and mission was. I can imagine seeing the dusk of twilight the shadows of the two of them, off a ways from the rest of the disciples sitting around a fire, having heated discussions. Judas is waving his finger at Jesus, and then pointing it back toward Jerusalem. Meanwhile, Jesus is gently pushing down Judas’ hands, calming him while he slowly shakes his head “no.”



            Judas may have had a clearer picture of what Jesus was called to do than Jesus did.  It’s just that God didn’t agree and Judas’ was wrong. Let me tell you a bit more about Judas so that you have a clearer picture.



            First, who was Judas? This is the first mystery. We don’t now much about him. Even his name, Judas Iscariot, is confusing. Scholars aren’t sure if “Iscariot” is a reference to where he comes from (like Jesus of Nazareth) or something else. There is no place called Iscariot, although some scholars believe that the name may refer the southern Judean town of Kerioth. Others say that “Iscariot” sounds a lot like the name of a secret society of assassins bent on driving the Romans out of Israel, and so his name identifies him as one of them. Still others believe that it was a name given to him later, after he died, and that means “liar” in Hebrew. Despite this confusion, there is much more certainty about his political passions. He was a zealot.



            When you hear the word “zealot,” how do you define it? You probably think it means a fanatic, or someone who is over the top politically or religiously. Actually, the word zealot meant something very different in Jesus’ time. Today we might call them revolutionaries or patriots. They were people who believed in the violent overthrow of the Roman government in Israel so that Israel could become an independent nation again. Zealots chafed at their 500 years of foreign occupation under the Babylonians, Assyrians, Greeks, and then Romans. Judas was part of a loose collection of zealots who believed in revolution, and this gets to the heart of his arguments with Jesus. He believed that Jesus was the messiah sent to overthrow the Romans and restore Israel. He believed that Jesus was a new David, ready to join his army of angels with an army of humans to raise up Israel again.



            The fact that included a zealot as a disciple tells us a lot about both Jesus’ ministry and how he put together his collection of disciples. I don’t know if you ever heard of a recent book by the acclaimed historian, Doris Kearns Goodwin, called Team of Rivals. She talks about the genius of Abraham Lincoln, who constructed an administrative cabinet not only of supporters, but also of enemies and rivals. He wanted to have different perspectives on his team. Jesus created a sort of discipleship of rivals.



            While Jesus didn’t make enemies his disciples, he did do something similar. Looking at the composition of his disciples, they were all so very different. First, take John, James, Peter, and Andrew. I’ve already told you from previous sermons that they were fishermen. I also mentioned that they were previously disciples of John the Baptist. That may not have fully registered with you, but what it meant was that they were all fairly extreme in their beliefs. In fact, by following John the Baptist, they were following an extreme form of Judaism that believed that all of Israel was corrupted by Roman and Gentile influences, and that righteous Jews should limit or end all contact with Gentiles.



            John the Baptist had come out of the Essene movement, the same movement that gave us the Dead Sea Scrolls. They were a Jewish sect that believed in the pursuit of purity. They had removed themselves from Jewish society to live in caves and cave-like dwellings near the Dead Sea. There was a reason John the Baptist baptized in the River Jordan. That was the dividing line between the Jewish lands and the wilderness. John would not cross the Jordan because it would lead him to set foot in the corruption of the world. People came to the Jordan to be purified. What does that say about John, James, Peter, and Andrew? It says that they had been pursuing purity, and that they had believed in the separation of Jews and Gentiles.



            Meanwhile, Jesus added two zealots: Judas Iscariot and Simon the Zealot. They shared a belief that the Romans had corrupted the Jews, but they had a different solution, as I mentioned above. They believed in the violent overthrow of the Romans in order to purify Israel—a concept the Essenes would have rejected because they believed only God could usher in a revolution, not men.



            Then Jesus added Matthew. He was a tax collector. In other words, he believed in collaboration with the Romans. He worked with the Romans. He had few problems with Roman occupation. Imagine what the conversations among the disciples must have been like—some advocating separation, some overthrow, and others accommodation.



            Getting back to Judas, if you remember the image I gave of Jesus and Judas having passionate conversations in the background, they would have been about Judas’ belief that Jesus was called to overthrow the Romans. Judas was convinced that Jesus’ calling was to be a sword-bearing messiah, raising an army of angels and zealots. Judas’ betrayal was actually his attempt to force Jesus to accept his messianic mantle. Judas wanted to force Jesus to stand up and start the revolution. In his own zealot mind, betraying Jesus wasn’t a betrayal. It was a call to action. He would have been convinced that by bringing soldiers there to arrest him, people would have responded the way they often do when a revolutionary leader is arrested. They would have risen up in protest, and Jesus would have been at the center, leading the Jews to glorious victory. The problem is that Judas’ vision wasn’t Jesus’ calling.



            Judas didn’t intend to have what happened happen. He did not intend for Jesus to be tortured and crucified. He did not intend for his betrayal to lead to Jesus’ death. He did not even imagine that resurrection was possible, and so he killed himself before he had a chance to discover a deeper truth. There is a belief, though, in the ancient Jewish legends that after Jesus’ death he descended into Hell, where a repentant Judas was lifted to Heaven. Remember that in our passage Judas did repent before killing himself.



            Judas offers a powerful example of the dark side of religious zeal. There are some really important lessons Judas teaches us about the nature of religious life and religious calling. Let me share some of them.



            The first lesson is the most crucial for so many religious people: Just because you are certain doesn’t make you right. On both the religious right and the left there are many zealots who are so sure that they know best what God wants, and because they are, they have no problems betraying God’s will in order to achieve what they think is God’s will. Throughout Christian history there have been so many movements, on a large and small scale, that were so certain of their rightness they would use any means necessary to accomplish their goals; even if it went against Jesus’ teachings and God’s will.



            The most obvious example of this is the Crusades. They were an attempt to recapture the Holy Lands from Muslims. They were a terrible period of Christian abuse and corruption. A great example of this is what happened in the first Crusade (there were twelve in all). The Byzantine king, in 1096, had encouraged the kings and nobles of Europe to travel through Byzantium to the Holy Lands to recapture Jerusalem. Many people responded to the call, but most only got as far as the Byzantine capital, Constantinople. Seeing no way to actually get to the Holy Lands from there, they pillaged Constantinople and the surrounding areas before returning to Europe. The first Crusade led to an attack on fellow Christians.



            Another example of certainty leading to wrongness was the period of Christian inquisitions. For three centuries during the Middle Ages, Christians persecuted each other in the attempt to route out heretics. The worst was the Spanish Inquisition, where Muslims, Jews, and enlightened Christians were often brutally tortured in the attempts\ to force conversions or get rid of heretics.



            Even great and good Christian figures weren’t immune to this kind of certainty that begets wrongness. Martin Luther, late in his life, was shocked by a widespread peasants’ revolt that was actually inspired by his own writings and Protestant beliefs. Thousands of impoverished peasants revolted in order to raise their standards of living. Luther wrote a pamphlet permitting the crushing of the revolt. The result was that between 100,000 and 300,000 peasants.



            Also, John Calvin (the namesake of Calvin Church) ended up giving permission to have one of his friends, Michael Servetus, burned at the stake. Servetus denied the doctrine of the Trinity, and Calvin believed that the threat of death would cause him to recant. It didn’t. Of course, Calvin, as great as he was, often led with certainty, whether he was right or not.



            Basically, being certain religiously is not the same as being right. Being passionate about a cause doesn’t make the cause right. Take a look around you. Where do you see people being absolutely certain but also wrong? Now, after you’ve done that, look inward. This is much harder: What are you certain about, but may not be right about? Be honest. You’ll find something.



            The second lesson from Judas is a simple one, although I have to admit that it’s a scary one for me to mention on Memorial Day because of people’s patriotic passions. Here goes: don’t confuse God and country. Judas did, and it led him to betray Jesus. I’m not saying that God doesn’t care about our country. What I am saying is that too often people mistake one for the other. They believe (as John Winthrop said about the founding of the Puritan Massachusetts Bay Colony) that America is meant to be a shining city upon a hill (misquoting Matthew 5:14). So they believe that anything America does must be God-ordained. That’s both hubris and confusing God and country. I believe God is involved in our country, but that does not mean that our country is God, nor that defending everything American is defending God.



            The final lesson is this: Don’t try to force God to do what you want. Instead, seek and do what God wants. Too often, when we seek God’s will, we aren’t really seeking God’s will. We are seeking what we want God to will for us, and we are mistakenly asking God to confirm what we’ve already decided. We do this when we pray to God, asking God what God wants, while secretly looking for proof that God wants what we’ve already decided.



            Judas is a great example of the dark side of faith, and so we need to learn from him important lessons: don’t confuse our certainty with God’s rightness, don’t confuse God and country, and don’t try to force God to do what we believe is right.



            Amen.

Who Were These Guys? The Apostle Andrew


John 1:35-45
May 18, 2014

The next day John again was standing with two of his disciples, and as he watched Jesus walk by, he exclaimed, “Look, here is the Lamb of God!”
The two disciples heard him say this, and they followed Jesus. When Jesus turned and saw them following, he said to them, “What are you looking for?” They said to him, “Rabbi” (which translated means Teacher), “where are you staying?” He said to them, “Come and see.” They came and saw where he was staying, and they remained with him that day. It was about four o’clock in the afternoon. One of the two who heard John speak and followed him was Andrew, Simon Peter’s brother. He first found his brother Simon and said to him, “We have found the Messiah” (which is translated Anointed). He brought Simon to Jesus, who looked at him and said, “You are Simon son of John. You are to be called Cephas” (which is translated Peter).
The next day Jesus decided to go to Galilee. He found Philip and said to him, “Follow me.” Now Philip was from Bethsaida, the city of Andrew and Peter. Philip found Nathanael and said to him, “We have found him about whom Moses in the law and also the prophets wrote, Jesus son of Joseph from Nazareth.”

            Would you die for a lie? I’m not asking if you would die for a mistake, such as being a soldier in a war started on false premises, or receiving false information that would lead you to risk your life for another. I’m asking whether you would be willing to risk dying for the proclamation of a something that you knew was a lie. If you created a lie about you’re having more influence than you really had, about a great feat you had supposedly accomplished, or about a great discovery you had made, and were threatened with death for it, would you be willing to die to keep the lie alive? Simply put, again, would you be willing to die for a lie?

            It was my asking this question, and then learning about the life of the apostle Andrew, that helped decide whether I believed in the resurrection or not. Even as I went into seminary, I wasn’t completely sold on truth of the resurrection. Since I wasn’t going to seminary with intent to be a pastor, I’m not sure it mattered whether I had it all figured out. But I wanted answers. At some point I became interested in what happened to all the apostles, and so I began to research it. In the Bible, you never really get much information on what happened to any of them. The closest we get is reading in Acts that Paul went to Rome to appeal a death sentence before the emperor, but Acts doesn’t tell us what happened to him in the end.

            When I investigated what happened to the apostles, the person who fascinated me the most was Andrew. Like all of the other apostles, except John, Andrew died a fairly gruesome death through crucifixion after a long mission to spread the gospel through much of what were, at the time, wild tribal areas. It was his refusal to bow down and worship the Roman emperor that led to his crucifixion. So, if the resurrection was a lie, why would people like Andrew have been willing to put up with such a struggling life, and with such an excruciating crucified death? Before going to seminary, I had been influenced by people who had said that Jesus was never resurrected, and that the disciples and followers of Jesus had invented it because they didn’t want to see their power and prestige diminished. The question is, if it was all a lie, would Andrew have willingly suffered so much for that lie?

            To understand how much Andrew was willing to sacrifice his life, it helps to learn something about him. As I mentioned a few weeks ago, Andrew was the younger brother of Peter, who eventually became the head of the early Christian church. The gospels don’t tell us much about him, other than the fact that he was clearly in Jesus’ inner circle of disciples. He was a man Jesus relied on.

            After Jesus’ resurrection and ascension, Andrew was one of the apostles who helped the early church grow. After seven or so years spreading the gospel in Jerusalem, he moved with Peter to Antioch, which is in present-day Syria. It was from there that he launched his mission to spread the gospel. Much like Paul, Andrew was sent out to new lands to start churches, but unlike Paul, Andrew was sent to marginally civilized, and some uncivilized, areas. Much like Thomas (about whom Rev. Frierson preached a few weeks ago), who was sent far afield to what is now Pakistan and India, Andrew travelled as far, but his travels went north. Unlike Paul, who travelled in and through highly literate areas, Andrew travelled through very illiterate areas. That’s why we have no letters from Andrew to the churches he founded or visited.

            Andrew started his mission on the island of Cyprus, where he was shipwrecked. Legend has it that after the members of the crew washed ashore, Andrew struck a rock with his staff, and a healing spring bubbled up. Washing his eyes in the spring restored the sight of the blinded ship captain.

            From there, Andrew went north along the shore of the Black Sea, eventually settling in the area of what is now Southern Romania at the mouth of the Danube River. For twenty years Andrew lived in a cave, travelling out to preach the gospel. Again, would a liar live like that? This was no cult leader. I know something about cults. Early on in my ministry I became somewhat involved in the Cult Awareness Network after meeting some people who left cults and told me of their experiences. What is typical of cults is that the leaders typically rule other members’ lives, amassing wealth and perks for themselves. Andrew amassed nothing, but lived a life of deprivation for Christ.

            After starting many churches in that area, Andrew travelled north to the top of the Black Sea, where the Dnieper River, after running through what is now the Ukraine, empties into it. Going up river, he reportedly lived for a while in a place that he prophesied would become a great city, and which eventually became Kiev, the capital of the Ukraine. From there he travelled north to what is now Novgorod in Russia, which is northeast of Estonia. It’s because of these missionary travels to bring Christianity that Andrew is considered the patron saint of Romania, the Ukraine, and Russia.

            As a side note, many of you know that Andrew is also the patron saint of Scotland, and that Scotland’s flag, which is a symbol of St. Andrew, is a giant white X (Andrew was eventually crucified on an X-shaped cross) on a blue background. Does this mean that Andrew went to Scotland? No. The reason that Scotland named Andrew it’s patron saint had to do with the Scott and Pict (the tribes that made up Scotland) king, Oengus II, praying to God that if his army defeated the Angles (precursors to the English) in battle, he would make Andrew his saint. The morning of the battle he saw a huge X in the sky, and won despite having inferior numbers. So Andrew became the patron saint of Scotland.

            Back to Andrew: From Novgorod, Andrew returned to the Black Sea area, moving to the Eastern edges and into the lands then called Scythia. From there he went south and preached in what is now the country of Georgia. After almost thirty years in tribal lands, suffering under harsh, harsh winters, and humid, mosquito-plagued summers, Andrew returned to more civilized areas. He came back to what was then called Byzantium (which eventually became Constantinople, and is now Istanbul) to help the church there. He helped install the first bishop of Byzantium. Eventually he travelled to city of Patras, which is on the northwestern edge of the lower peninsula of Greece (the Peloponnese). It was there, because he refused to bow down under the persecutions of the emperor Domitian, and was crucified. The reason his cross was shaped like an X rather than a T is that, like Peter, Andrew said he was unworthy to be crucified like Jesus, and asked to be bound to an X-shaped cross.

            Looking back on all of this, does this sound like the actions of a person promulgating a lie? Would Andrew and others really have lived like this and then died like this for a lie? Some might say that the answer is “yes.” But my next question was the one that was the clincher for me: Would people who apparently have so much spiritual depth, wisdom, and insight die for a lie? What is indisputable is that there is tremendous spiritual depth in the gospels, demonstrated in Acts, and presented in the letters of Paul, Peter, James, and John. The writings and teachings of false prophets and cult leaders simply don’t last through the ages. Andrew was part of the tradition that shaped Paul, Peter, James, and John. He was part of the tradition that gave us the gospels. These were all men who wrote with tremendous spiritual depth and power, and were willing to suffer and die terrible deaths themselves. Would all of that be typical of people following a lie?

            When I look at Andrew’s life, ministry, and death, it says a lot about what a life of serving God means. A life of faith doesn’t necessarily mean moving to the Ukraine to spread Christianity, but it does mean some things that are related.

            First, I think Andrew’s life sends a crucial message to those in suffering who ask, “Why would a good God allow ____ to happen?” You’ve heard people ask these kinds of questions. When they are in the midst of suffering and struggling, they’ll ask why God would let whatever it is to happen to them. The problem, when they ask that question, is that you can’t answer it at the time. People who ask that question don’t really want to hear a credible answer. They are suffering. They are in pain. And they want God to help them. Still, Andrew’s life is an answer to that question: A good God doesn’t always keep us from suffering. But a good God does call on us to be an answer to suffering. Read that sentence again and let it sink in.

            Nowhere in the Bible does it suggest that if we are faithful and good that no bad will come to us. Nowhere in the Bible does it suggest, or even imply, that a life of faith translates into a life of ease. In fact, just the opposite is true. The Bible is very clear that when we have faith, we often are led into struggle to relieve the suffering of others. Look at Andrew’s life. He struggled his whole apostolic life. He lived in a cave for twenty years. He travelled to tribal lands that weren’t especially kind to Greek-speaking, Roman Empire dwelling strangers. He endured harsh winters and humid summers. He walked everywhere. He gave up a normal life and paid for it with his life. But in the process, Andrew brought hope and life to thousands. A good God doesn’t always keep us from suffering, but a good God does call on us to be an answer to suffering.

            A second lesson from Andrew is that to live a life of faith means being willing to stretch for God. That means doing what you might not really want to do, and going where you might not really want to go, but serving anyway. It means stretching to serve God, even if it puts you in uncomfortable and uncertain situations.

            This is exactly what we are doing at Calvin Presbyterian Church with our mission to Trinity Presbyterian Church. If you don’t know much about this, Trinity Church in Butler was a 200-member church as few as five years ago. It went through a crisis because of a difficult pastor, and shrunk to 17 members. They are now just a bit over 25 members. We have made a two-year commitment to lead their worship services and help them grow again. Rev. Frierson will be their primary preacher at their 11 am service, which means she will be here only occasionally at our 11 am service. It also means I am leading their session, and helping them navigate through their struggles by leading the church. This is a stretch for us personally, and for Calvin Church. But it’s what God wants us to do, and so we’re called to stretch.

            This same kind of stretching is what we are trying to do with out Finish in Faith capital campaign, which we are embarking on beginning on June 8th. We are asking you to stretch to help us get rid of our debt so that we can move into the future without the shackle of long-term debt. This is a stretch, but considering we’ve gone from $.16 million in debt down to approximately $249,000 in seven years, that means we’re a congregation that gets the need to stretch.

            Ultimately, Andrew’s message can be distilled down into a simple one. Much of what we are called to do be answer to the world’s suffering and to stretch in ways that many people don’t see, but God sees it, and it is important to God. So serve God, be an answer to suffering, and be willing to stretch.

            Amen

Who Were These Guys? Mary Magdalene, by The Rev. Connie Frierson


John 20:1-18  The Resurrection of Jesus

Early on the first day of the week, while it was still dark, Mary Magdalene came to the tomb and saw that the stone had been removed from the tomb. So she ran and went to Simon Peter and the other disciple, the one whom Jesus loved, and said to them, ‘They have taken the Lord out of the tomb, and we do not know where they have laid him.’ Then Peter and the other disciple set out and went towards the tomb. The two were running together, but the other disciple outran Peter and reached the tomb first. He bent down to look in and saw the linen wrappings lying there, but he did not go in. Then Simon Peter came, following him, and went into the tomb. He saw the linen wrappings lying there, and the cloth that had been on Jesus’ head, not lying with the linen wrappings but rolled up in a place by itself. Then the other disciple, who reached the tomb first, also went in, and he saw and believed; for as yet they did not understand the scripture, that he must rise from the dead. Then the disciples returned to their homes.

Jesus Appears to Mary Magdalene
But Mary stood weeping outside the tomb. As she wept, she bent over to look into the tomb; and she saw two angels in white, sitting where the body of Jesus had been lying, one at the head and the other at the feet. They said to her, ‘Woman, why are you weeping?’ She said to them, ‘They have taken away my Lord, and I do not know where they have laid him.’ When she had said this, she turned round and saw Jesus standing there, but she did not know that it was Jesus. Jesus said to her, ‘Woman, why are you weeping? For whom are you looking?’ Supposing him to be the gardener, she said to him, ‘Sir, if you have carried him away, tell me where you have laid him, and I will take him away.’ Jesus said to her, ‘Mary!’ She turned and said to him in Hebrew, ‘Rabbouni!’ (which means Teacher). Jesus said to her, ‘Do not hold on to me, because I have not yet ascended to the Father. But go to my brothers and say to them, “I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.” ’ Mary Magdalene went and announced to the disciples, ‘I have seen the Lord’; and she told them that he had said these things to her.

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Here is a riddle for you. A father gives a new car to his 16-year-old son and they head out together to try it out. They are involved in a terrible accident. Tragically the father is killed immediately. The son is taken in critical condition to the hospital. He is rushed into surgery. In the operating theater the surgeon looks at the boy and says, “I can’t operate on this boy.”  Why can’t the surgeon operate?  The answer is that the boy was her son, Her son. Some of you may have heard this puzzler before. But our tendency is to get a little stuck because we still, even now, don’t think of surgeons as women. Despite the fact that there are now almost as many female doctors as male doctors, our secret blind spots come out.  Our sermon series title points out that same basic bias. We are asking, “Who were these guys?” And we are looking at the early followers of Jesus and we are assuming they are guys.  (Actually we just liked the casual sound of the title.) But today we are looking a woman who followed Christ, Mary Magdalene.
         Mary Magdalene is the follower of Christ that is mentioned more than many of the disciples. This is what we know about Mary Magdalene. She was called Mary Magdalene because she came from Magdala, the western coast of the Sea of Galilee. There is Magdala just a few miles from Gennesaret where Jesus preached from a boat. There is Magdala right within walking distance of so much of Jesus ministry. It makes sense that Mary was an early follower. She was in the right location. From the gospels, we know these things about Mary Magdalene. In Luke 8, Jesus, at the beginning of his traveling ministry, heals Mary Magdalena. She was healed of seven demons, whatever that means.  As a result of this healing, she traveled with Jesus and the 12 and a group of women. The women, one of who was Mary Magdalene, provided for Jesus and the 12 out of their own income. So we know that Mary Magdalene had an income and an income large enough to share.  Mary Magdalene and these other women made the traveling ministry of Jesus possible.  Mary Magdalene is present in every one of the gospels at the crucifixion. Only Mary Magdalene is present with Joseph of Aramathea at Jesus burial. She arrives with the other women before dawn to anoint Jesus body on the 3rd day and she is present in every one of the Gospels at the resurrection. She was the first to see the risen Christ. And she was the first to go and tell the disciples that Jesus was raised.  Because of this St. Augustine and Pope Gregory and Bernard of Clarveaux all call Mary Magdalene “The Apostle to the Apostles.”
         Of course when we speak of Mary Magdalene that brings up two issues, prostitution and conspiracy. In popular culture, Mary Magdalene seems to be defined by legends as much as scripture.  The most commonly held belief is that Mary M. was a prostitute. The western church, the Roman Catholic Church has defined Mary M as a penitent prostitute.  The Eastern Orthodox Church never defined Mary Magdalene this way. How did Mary Magdalene the prostitute all start?  The earliest trace comes from Ephraim, the Syrian in the 4th century and then again in a homily by Pope Gregory the 1st in 591AD.  These ideas came from a little creative addition to the biblical stories.  In Luke and in John a woman anoints Jesus feet first with her tears and then with costly oil. Luke says she was a loose woman, but John says she was Mary of Bethany.  Later Christians just joined or conflated those incidences to create Mary Magdalene the penitent prostitute.  But the stories don’t name Mary Magdalene. The problem is that there were just too many Mary’s. In Jesus time if you dropped a rock from the tallest building in Jerusalem it would hit ten Mary’s before it hit the ground. There was Mary Magdalene, Mary of Bethany (sister to Lazarus and Martha) Mary the mother of Jesus, Mary, the mother of James and Mary Salome. To confuse things further there was a famous St. Mary of Egypt in the 4th century who was a repentant prostitute. The scholars call this story of the prostitute Mary Magdalene “the composite Mary problem.” It wasn’t until 1969 that Pope Paul separated out this composite Mary problem in a Roman Missal and declared Mary Magdalene not to be a prostitute.  But regardless, the thought of a sexy Mary Magdalene has more spice than a faithful disciple Mary. So even modern stories, like Jesus Christ Super Star and The Last Temptation of Christ, the storytellers continue to paint Mary scarlet.
         The other conspiracies have Mary Magdalene as Jesus lover and wife. There are fragments of early texts that are not in our bible, that tells of Mary Magdalene. These are The Gospel of Thomas, The Gospel of Phillip, and The Gospel of Mary. These were writings that date from late 1st century to the 4th century. The stories and the conspiracies are complicated and convoluted. But after reading through them all, there were good reasons why they didn’t make the cannon. Conspiracies are fun but in the end they seem conjecture, not fact. I don’t take them as scripture but the fact they exist shows that Mary Magdalene probably was a leading figure in the early church.
         What we have in the biblical account shows us a lot about how Mary Magdalene followed Jesus and can show us how to follow now.  Mary was healed. Mary was healed completely and fully. Because she was healed she gave. She gave in practical ways and in tender ways.  She was both pragmatic and passionately loving. She followed Jesus as closely as she could. And when Jesus called her name she recognized the Lord’s voice.
         We first know of Mary Magdalene because she was healed of seven demons. We modern people don’t know exactly what is meant by seven demons.  But seven has a particular meaning whenever it is used in the bible. For example, there were seven days of creation.  In Exodus, you could only keep a slave for seven years and then they were set free. In Leviticus, the seventh year was a year of Jubilee when debts were marked paid, fields rested.  In Revelation there are seven plagues and seven angels. Jesus says to forgive not just seven times as Peter suggested but seven times seventy.  Seven has special meaning. Seven is always used to show God’s completed action.  God is intrinsically involved and God is acting for God’s purpose and God’s plan. Mary might have been completely taken over by demons, meaning a complex illness that might be a complete illness including the physical, psychological and spiritual. So we can understand Mary as a woman who experienced true and complete darkness. She knew complete suffering. The bright light of God is that when Mary Magdalene was healed, she was healed completely, forgiven completely and loved completely. By saying that seven demons were exorcised scripture is telling us that Mary was completely healed. God’s work was complete in her.
         But for us we want and yearn for healing in one area but we fence off another area from God completely. We think in terms of a pie chart but God wants the whole pie. We want God to take away our illness of the body but not the illness of the spirit that might involve greed or hatred or unforgiveness. We might want God to take our depression but we want to hold on to our grievances. God wants the whole mess not just the bits and pieces we don’t like. Our problem is that we just want some pieces healed but we want to essentially stay the same. The truth is we aren’t really pie charts, with parts for us, parts for work, parts for family, parts for God. We aren’t so clear and separate that one piece of God is enough. If there is poison in one part of the pie, the poison is through the whole pie.  God wants complete and whole healing. God wants a seven devil, all in complete work of God in us. 
         When Mary Magdalene was healed, she changed her life in practical ways and in tender ways. She gave money. She gave time. She gave heart and emotions. She supported Jesus and his disciples with her own income; she followed through villages and towns trekking across Galilee and on to Jerusalem. Mary Magdalene knew the price of a loaf of bread and how much a nights lodging might be. She knew spiritual leaders still needed food and drink and concrete practical care.  Mary Magdalene was present on sunny days and on the darkest day of all. She was at the foot of the cross. Sometimes just being present is the only practical comfort you can provide.  After Jesus death, Mary Magdalene was with Joseph of Aramethea as the stone was rolled into place. On the third day, she and another Mary were there as dawn, the earliest time a woman could go abroad. The women were there with spices and oils to perform that last act of tender and practical and hands on love.  To prepare the body is both loving and practical.
          Mary Magdalene teaches us that loving tenderness often requires us to attempt the impossible. The women had no way to roll back the heavy stone but despite impossible obstacles they still showed up. Willing to do what they could do even if it seemed impossible.  After angels had spoken and Peter and John had seen the empty tomb and left, Mary Magdalene remained. She stayed. As though she could not and would not be separated from Jesus, or from the last place she had seen him. Even when she thinks Jesus is the gardener, she insists that if he knew where they had laid her Lord then she could go and pick up the body of Christ and care for it with the last tender service. Mary Magdalene as one woman wouldn’t be able to carry a full-grown man’s body. But in loving tenderness she would attempt the impossible. Christ followers attempt the impossible.
         Someone once said, “The greatest spiritual disciple isn’t hours of prayer or intentional poverty. The greatest spiritual practice is showing up.”  Mary Magdalene showed up even when she didn’t or couldn’t know what to say, or to think or do.  We think we have to know how it all works. Or we think we need a complete understanding or all the answers. But with our God showing up with love counts. When we love like that miracles happen. The miracle happened to Mary. Jesus called her by name, “Mary” That short name and at the sound of her name from the lips of her God Mary saw Jesus.  Earlier in the Gospel, Jesus said, “I am the good Shepherd. I know my own and my own know me.” (John 10:14)  Jesus also said, “My sheep listen to my voice; I know them, and they follow me.” (John 10:27) Mary recognized immediately the voice of the good shepherd.
         So what do we learn about following God from Mary? Open up to God’s healing completely. Don’t hold on to one or two slices of that messy pie. Let healing change who you are and what you do. Be practical. Be tender. Be a good practical supporter of Christ; give what you are called to give. Be at the foot of the cross; be there even if you are in the face of violence and evil. Be willing to do what seems impossible. Listen for Jesus’ voice calling you by name. And if Jesus sends you, you go then you will be an apostle.  These are the lessons we learn from Mary Magdalene.
        
Amen.


Who Were These Guys? The Apostle Paul


John 21:15-23
May 4, 2014

When they had finished breakfast, Jesus said to Simon Peter, “Simon son of John, do you love me more than these?” He said to him, “Yes, Lord; you know that I love you.” Jesus said to him, “Feed my lambs.” A second time he said to him, “Simon son of John, do you love me?” He said to him, “Yes, Lord; you know that I love you.” Jesus said to him, “Tend my sheep.” He said to him the third time, “Simon son of John, do you love me?” Peter felt hurt because he said to him the third time, “Do you love me?” And he said to him, “Lord, you know everything; you know that I love you.” Jesus said to him, “Feed my sheep. Very truly, I tell you, when you were younger, you used to fasten your own belt and to go wherever you wished. But when you grow old, you will stretch out your hands, and someone else will fasten a belt around you and take you where you do not wish to go.” (He said this to indicate the kind of death by which he would glorify God.) After this he said to him, “Follow me.”
Peter turned and saw the disciple whom Jesus loved following them; he was the one who had reclined next to Jesus at the supper and had said, “Lord, who is it that is going to betray you?” When Peter saw him, he said to Jesus, “Lord, what about him?” Jesus said to him, “If it is my will that he remain until I come, what is that to you? Follow me!” So the rumor spread in the community that this disciple would not die. Yet Jesus did not say to him that he would not die, but, “If it is my will that he remain until I come, what is that to you?”

            Have you ever wondered where great leaders come from? Most of us have theories, but are they valid? For example, most people would think that great leaders come from good backgrounds that instill in them the proper values, foundations, and stability to become good leaders. In essence, great leaders come from great backgrounds. They’ve had good families, good schooling, a proper upbringing.

            You wouldn’t have to look hard to find great leaders who had these backgrounds. George Washington had a very good upbringing, education, and career. In fact his career in the military was an established vocation that instilled discipline and great values. Thomas Jefferson also was a great leader who came from a good background. His family was stable, he was well educated, and he learned the right ways to live life. Look at John F. Kennedy. He came from a very stable background where family, education, and service were stressed. Similar things could be said of Ronald Reagan, who came from a stable, Midwestern family, and who grew up with the proper foundations.

            Still, these folks are more the exception than the rule. Most great leaders emerge out of great difficulty in their lives, whether it is rising above their unstable families, their lack of education, or the obstacles they’ve faced. Abraham Lincoln, for example, rose to greatness on the rubble of struggle. He grew up in a relatively poor family, and didn’t have much there to inspire greatness. As an adult, his record was one more of failure than of success. For example, in 1831 he started a business, which failed.  In 1832 he ran for the state legislature and lost. In 1832, he lost his job, then applied to law school, but was rejected. In 1833, he borrowed some money from a friend to begin a business, and by the end of the year was bankrupt. He spent the next 17 years paying off his debt. In 1834, he ran for the state legislature again and won. In 1835, his fiancĂ© died and the next year he had a total nervous breakdown and was in bed for six months. In 1838 he south to become speaker of the state legislature and lost. In 1840, he sought to become elector and lost. In 1843, he ran for Congress and lost. In 1846, he ran for Congress again and won, but was defeated in his reelection in 1848. In 1849, he sought the job of land officer in Illinois and was rejected.  In 1854, he ran for U.S. Senate and lost. In 1856, he sought the vice-presidential nomination and got less than 100 votes. In 1858, he ran for U.S. Senate again and lost. In 1860, he ran for president and won. 

            Franklin Delano Roosevelt came from a seemingly stable family, but many say that his rise to greatness came after he was stricken with polio and was mostly paralyzed from the waist down. It was his determination to overcome his infirmity that led him to rise to great heights. His older cousin, Teddy Roosevelt, also came from a fairly wealthy, stable background, but he spent most of his childhood sick and in bed. He overcame his long-term illness by striving to be physically fit and seeking out obstacles to overcome.

            Even looking at our past two presidents, it’s their difficulties that led them to where they were. George W. Bush came from a stable background, but many say that the defining struggle for him was overcoming his alcohol addiction. Prior to his recovery he drifted. Barack Obama was half African-American and half-white growing up mostly in Hawaii. His father more or less abandoned he and his mother, and he grew up never really feeling like he fit into either the white or the African-American culture. Their stories are more typical of the backgrounds of great leaders than that of stability.

            The great leaders of Christianity were often forged in difficulty. The apostle Paul grew up in stability, but it was his blindness, his having to give up his prior Jewish beliefs, and the breakdown of his whole world that became the foundation for his great leadership. Peter also grew to be a great leader through his failures.  

            Peter may have been one of the most unlikely leaders of a major movement in all of history. His resume starts out pretty bland, and then veers southward into a mixture of failure, misunderstanding, and abandonment. He started out, much like the apostle John, as a fisherman on the Sea of Galilee. He had been a disciple of John the Baptist when Jesus called him to be one of his disciples.

            His time as a disciple was mostly unremarkable, unless you consider his failures to be remarkable. Still, Jesus saw something in him that we would not have typically seen. Think about the qualities you look for in a CEO or president. Would you look for the ability to say the wrong thing at the wrong time? For example, there’s a point where Jesus tells his disciples that he must be arrested and killed. Paul immediately upbraids him, telling Jesus that this can’t happen. Jesus’ reply?  “Get behind me, Satan.” Being called “Satan” isn’t normally a good recommendation. When Jesus is transfigured, and Elijah and Moses appear with him, Peter replies with a fairly unsubstantial statement: “Lord, it is good for us to be here; if you wish, I will make three dwellings here, one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.” I’m not sure what he should have said, or even what I would have said, but offering to build a lean-to for each of them isn’t typically at the top of people’s lists.

            Also, in looking for qualities in a CEO or president, would you typically choose the person who keeps falling asleep when you are deeply struggling? Jesus asks Peter to join him in Garden of Gethsemane while he prayed for his life. Peter couldn’t keep awake. And then when he woke up and realized what was happening, he pulled out his sword and cut off the ear of a soldier. In one fell swoop he forgot all of Jesus’ teachings. Fortunately, Jesus healed the soldier’s ear.

            Finally, would you choose as your CEO or president the guy who, when the chips are down, denies even being associated with your company? Peter, standing outside the Temple while Jesus is tried by the Sanhedrin, is asked three times if he was one of those with Jesus. Each time he says something equivalent to, “No, man. Wasn’t me. You must have me confused with someone else.” This is the guy Jesus picked to lead his movement?

            Why did Jesus pick Peter to be the great leader, the rock upon whom the church was built? Looking deeper, Peter had a quality that many of us never quite grasp. First, Peter was willing to learn from his mistakes, to become open to new thoughts, new ideas, and new ways of living. He was willing to become radically open to God:

            For example, one of his main qualities was simply his willingness to say yes to Jesus. When Jesus called him to become a disciple, Peter said yes. When Jesus walked on water, it was only Peter who said yes to Jesus’ invitation to join him. He took Jesus’ hand, stepped out on the water, and was able to walk, if only for a little while. He said yes.

            Peter was also the one who constantly sought Jesus’ wisdom. When Jesus was asked a question by one of his disciples, more often than not it was Peter asking the question. He had a deep, deep thirst to grow in Christ’s wisdom, presence, love, and power. Peter is the one, when quizzed about who Jesus really was, responded, "You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God." The others repeated only what they heard: that Jesus was Elijah or a prophet. Peter didn’t take long to learn from his mistakes. Our passage is a testament to that. Jesus asks him three times, “Simon son of John, do you love me?” The first time, Peter simply answers, “Yes, Lord; you know that I love you.” Then Jesus tells him to tend and feed his sheep. In other word, take care of all the people I send to you. Jesus keeps asking, and each time Peter is more distressed, and more adamant, that he loves Jesus. Why does Jesus ask him three times? He asks him one time for each time Peter denied him. Peter knows how to learn from his mistakes.

            Also, what made Peter a great leader is that he was able to discern God’s will, even when it went against convention and what the religious people wanted. He’s the one who had a vision of God telling him that Christians weren’t restricted just to kosher foods. All foods are good to eat. The other leaders didn’t like this message because they wanted to preserve the Jewishness of the early Christian faith. Peter was determined: they will seek and do God’s will, not their own. Peter was the one who leads them to wait on Pentecost for the coming of the Holy Spirit. He was the one who accepted Paul into the Christian fold, despite the fact that Paul had been a persecutor of Christians. Peter was a leader.

            The rest of his life displayed that leadership. He led the early church, despite the death rate of early Christians under Jewish persecution. He helped the church move to Antioch and become re-established there once it became apparent that Jerusalem wasn’t safe anymore. He eventually moved to Corinth and became influential in the church community there. And when Christians were being persecuted under the crazy Roman emperor, Nero, Peter went to Rome to help. It was here that Jesus’ prophecy about Peter came true: “But when you grow old, you will stretch out your hands, and someone else will fasten a belt around you and take you where you do not wish to go.” The prophecy came true in Rome when he was arrested and crucified under Nero’s persecution of Christians. Peter apparently begged to be crucified upside-down, saying that he did not deserve to be crucified in the same manner as Jesus.

            In many ways, Peter is THE model of faith. And if we listen to him, we can learn some very important lessons about faith from him.

            Lesson 1: Don’t be defined by your failures. Be defined by how you overcome them. Too often people judge each other because of how they’ve failed. If Jesus had done that with Peter, we would never have known who Peter was. Everyone fails at some point in his or her life. The question is whether we are willing and able to get up, dust ourselves, off, and keep moving forward. Peter overcame his failures and did great things, learning from his failures how to succeed. Are we able to do that in life and faith?

            Lesson 2: Never get so set in your beliefs and perspectives that you can’t change them for God. If Peter had any quality, it was the ability to not be so constrained by doctrine, dogma, and orthodoxy that he couldn’t hear God. For him, all that mattered was the ability to seek and follow Christ’s will. If that will ran counter to common wisdom, cherished beliefs, or comfortable traditions, Peter was willing to change.

            Lesson 3: Learn to live a life of saying yes to God. I believe this is the most important lesson of Peter. Over and over he said yes to Jesus, and he didn’t let anything get in the way of that, even his own faults. Ultimately this is what matters in the Christian life,… saying yes to God.  

Amen.