Pilgrim
Theological College Chapel
October
25th 2017.
Texts: Matthew 20:1-16; Romans 5:1-12.
This sermon was preached at the regular college chapel to a congregation of almost exclusively ordination candidates and college faculty.
*******
So here we are. Almost
500 years (less just six days) since the Reformation began
The day when, at least
as legend has it, Martin Luther strode to the door of the Wittenberg Castle
Church and posted his 95 theses.
The ripples from that
stone dropped in the pond of Western Christendom reach across to this very
institution, to this community of people, to this moment.
But, of course, those
ripples have not reached us through a smooth advance of gentle concentric waves
travelling across those five centuries.
Between here and now
and there and then, those ripples have travelled an ambiguous journey.
The impact of that
initial protest in 1517 has included violence, division, death, mistrust and mayhem.
And none of those on a small scale.
And that's not even to mention the links that are drawn between the Reformation and secularism with its disenchantment, individualism with its weakening of community, or capitalism and its inequality.
And none of those on a small scale.
And that's not even to mention the links that are drawn between the Reformation and secularism with its disenchantment, individualism with its weakening of community, or capitalism and its inequality.
Like all the Christian
movements in history, the Reformation is marked by deep ambiguity.
So, even allowing for these various reasons for ambiguity, what is it that we
are celebrating?
Well, we could say we
are celebrating a certain liberation from ecclesiastical tyranny.
We could say we are
celebrating a liberation of the gospel from its disappearance beneath layers of
tradition.
We could say we are celebrating
the liberation of ministry from its centuries of institutionalism.
We could say we are
celebrating the liberation of the biblical text from its dogmatic control.
But I’m going to
invite you to celebrate the ‘alien righteousness of God’.
Let's face it, could there be anything more certain to induce a celebratory mood?
In his essay ‘Two
kinds of righteousness,’ written in 1519, Luther referred to
“an
alien righteousness of another, instilled from without. This is the
righteousness of Christ by which he justifies through faith.”
At once we are into Reformation disputes about righteousness, faith, justification,
works, and law.
And at once we are
also into the disputes about Luther’s relationship to Pauline exegesis and the
impact of the New Perspective on Paul on our reception of Luther as an
interpreter of Paul.
Can I ask you to put
those concerns on hold just for a moment?
Regardless of how well
he interpreted Paul, Luther can at least, I think, be recognised as putting his
finger on something essential to Christianity and the gospel it proclaims.
Jesus, Paul and
countless Christian thinkers, prophets and activists since, have unsettled prevailing
conventions about the relationship between piety and morality.
Or between what we
might term religion and ethics, or even between spirituality and justice.
At least some of
Jesus’ teaching about the kingdom of God seems to unsettle prevailing
assumptions which suggested God’s favour was a reward for a virtuous or
religious or spiritual life.
Many of Jesus’
parables seem to invert assumptions about what is deemed natural or
conventional. The parable of the Workers in the Vineyard (to which we listened) inverts everything we might assume about natural justice. In the kingdom of
heaven, a different economy of grace operates.
Paul’s teaching about
faith and righteousness exploded the nexus between law and justification
maintained by at least some of his contemporaries. And in the passage we heard from Romans 5, we hear the striking claim: ‘Christ died for the ungodly’.
Christ did not die for the religious, or the virtuous, or the holy, or the
spiritual.
Did you hear that?
Christ died for the ungodly. And who’s that. By Paul’s logic in Romans: that’s
all of us.
But I want to suggest
that behind these challenges to prevailing assumptions about human faith and human
behaviour, both Jesus and Paul were also saying something about the character
of God.
Or at least, what they
were saying about human faith and human behaviour inevitably unsettled some
prevailing assumptions about the character of God.
And so was Luther.
In thesis 28 of the
Heidelberg Disputation of 1518, Luther contrasted the love of God with human
love.
The love of God does not find, but creates, that
which is pleasing to it. The love of man comes into being through that which is
pleasing to it.
In other words, the love of God is not responsive as human love is; the
love of God is creative and not determined by that which it loves. In terms of
this contrast, human love is reactive; God’s love is just there.
In his ‘proof’ of this thesis, Luther says something else. Now the focus
is on what it is that make sinful humans attractive to God.
“sinners
are attractive because they are loved; they are not loved because they are
attractive.”
Let me say that again:
“sinners
are attractive because they are loved; they are not loved because they are
attractive.”
In other words, we
cannot attract God’s love by virtue of what we do. Rather: God is attracted to
us because it is God’s character to be attracted to us.
Let me ask you: How much has this
thought grasped you?
Yes, we might well be
able to articulate the ‘priority of grace’.
We might well be able
to affirm that ‘God is love’
But has this idea that
God draws near to us regardless of our worthiness really grasped your
theological imagination and your pastoral calling?
I ask the question
because I think that many of the prevailing assumptions that Jesus, Paul and
Luther unsettled continue to prevail.
I trust I’m not simply
projecting my own assumptions on to everyone else, but I’ll venture to say that
we find it quite easy to think that we can bargain with God. It comes almost
naturally to us.
If
I just do this, then perhaps God will…
It is a kind of quid
pro quo understanding of our relationship with God.
Christianity has never
been able fully to release itself from moralism; or from a certain impulse
towards religious purity.
When 15 or so years
ago, the researchers into American youth Christianity coined the phrase
‘Moralistic Therapeutic Deism’ they were not simply describing one cohort of
Christians. They identified something that seems to run very close to surface
of all Christianity and all Christians.
It has shown itself in
the ease with which Christians have pronounced judgement on ‘the world’ in
harsh tones that suggest deep down we really do think that we have somehow
earned God’s favour in a way that ‘the world’ has yet to.
And I don’t mean
‘those other Christians’. I mean us. We can so easily default to the quid pro
quo mindset. We think we can make ourselves attractive to God. And perhaps we
even do it most pointedly when we think it is only a problem to be seen in
those other Christians.
(And in this regard this there is a real challenge. Christians can and do distort the understanding of God. So, there is
an issue of how we challenge ‘Christian views’ that we believe to be wrong
without falling into the trap of thinking that those we think are wrong can’t
challenge us back. And that would take another sermon or two to address
adequately.)
There is no shortage
of presentations of Christianity getting air time in the midst of the national
debate about Same Sex Marriage which I believe are fundamentally wrong.
I can’t help but hear
a certain and pervasive moralism underlying many of the Christian contributions
to this discussion.
I can’t help but
wonder what idea of God actually underwrites some of these views.
But perhaps we also have to ask about the ideas of God that underwrite even our strong convictions about the inclusivity of God’s love. Do we draw those convictions from the radicalness of the Christian gospel? Or do we draw them from what we as sophisticated modern liberal people think God should be like? A view that perhaps only thinly veils its own quid quo quo logic.
But let’s not focus
just now on the self-critical introspection, even if that would be a very
Luther-like thing to do.
Let’s think about God.
Let’s think about God
who, Paul tells us, “proves his love for us in that while we were still sinners
Christ died for us”.
Let us think about God
whose son “Christ died for the ungodly”.
Or think about the
landowner in Jesus’ parable who declares to those who thought themselves more
worthy: “Take what belongs to you and go: I choose to give to this last the
same as I give to you”. God is not a God of the quid pro quo.
To come back to
Luther: it is an alien righteousness by which we are justified – not our own. This
focus on this alien righteousness that comes from outside ourselves means, as
Luther saw,that we are not loved because we are attractive. We are attractive because
we are loved – by God.
Is that insight worth
celebrating?
I think it is.
One of the most basic
Christian convictions is that God is love. For all the ease with which we might
cite and proclaim this, it is not a self-evident truth ready to be picked up
from a few random observations of the world.
It is a hard won
conviction. The early Christians we convinced of it not because they looked at
the beauty of the world or the circumstances of their lives. Far from it. They
were convinced of it because of Jesus’ life, death and resurrection. After all,
again to quote Paul, God had to prove or demonstrate his love for us.
At least according to
Paul, God didn’t think it was self-evident.
Yet we as Christians
and the church collectively can so easily live in forgetfulness of this
conviction. As much as it is a hard-won conviction, it also an easily-lost
conviction and an easily-domesticated conviction.
Nevertheless, from time to time, so it seems, God, raises up people, sometimes the most awkward and irritating of people, to
unearth that conviction from beneath the layers of piety, religion,
spirituality, ecclesiasticism, and even theology, with which we cover it.
So, this is at least
one reason why the Reformation should be celebrated, notwithstanding all the
ambiguity that comes with it.
As a church that
stands in the Reformed tradition, what might any of this say to us as ministers or future ministers in the
Uniting Church in Australia?
As a church are we
fully convinced of this truth?
How prevalent is the
quid pro logic in our lives and that of the church’s wider membership?
My own view is that it
is quite prevalent.
Twice recently, I’ve
had UCA ministers tell me their sadness about members of their congregations
declaring that ‘they are not good enough’. And these are members of 40 and 50
years standing.
Some of you have heard
me tell the story of the parishioner of mine who would never participate in
communion because in her words, ‘I am not worthy’.
These scenarios will have multiple reasons. But at the very least they are evidence of the resilience within the church of forms of piety and theology that have never been unsettled by the generosity or the radicalness of the gospel.
These scenarios will have multiple reasons. But at the very least they are evidence of the resilience within the church of forms of piety and theology that have never been unsettled by the generosity or the radicalness of the gospel.
How will you as
minsters proclaim this gospel to those in
the church so that they will know that they don’t have to be worthy?
Perhaps we could have
a moratorium on discussion about the future of the church and spend a decade trying
to unearth from beneath all the layers of Uniting Church-, Australian
protestant- and Christendom-piety that hard won conviction that “God has proved his
love for us that whilst we still sinners
Christ died for us”.
And perhaps we might
need some of the belligerence, pugnacity, and even existential angst of Martin
Luther to do this.
We might ponder his
idea of the ‘alien righteousness’.
And we might ponder
his insight: “sinners are attractive because they are loved; they are not loved
because they are attractive.”
And I suspect that not
a few members of the Uniting Church might find that quite liberating.
But not just ‘those other
members of the Uniting Church’ – perhaps it is also us who need to be
constantly reminded of it and be liberated by it.
We are attractive to
God just because God loves us. We are not loved by God because we are
attractive. And that is gospel. And, however alien it is, it is worth
celebrating. Amen.
2 comments:
Thanks, Geoff, for the unearthing of Luther's phrase, "the alien righteousness of God." It suggests no contamination with our self-righteousness. Jenny and I have just been to a Lutheran renewal weekend hosted by our son, Stephen's church in Toowoomba. One of the sessions was specifically celebrating Luther and this anniversary. Not surprisingly, the speaker was emphasising the place of experience of God in Luther's thinking in the face of much expression of faith limited to the mind rather than the whole self - I've struggled for the right words here!
Neil
Thanks Neil.
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