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                    <text>The Impossible Possibility
Easter Sunday
Genesis 11:27-30, 12:1-3; Romans 4:16-21; Matthew 28:1-10
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
April 20, 2003
Transcription of the spoken sermon
Whatever the final epitaph over my ministry turns out to be, regarding where I
have brought this community, you will have to agree that I have brought you the
finest scholars and the leading voices on the biblical and theological issues most
critical to an intelligent understanding of the Christian faith and the role and
function of religion as we have attempted to re-imagine the faith - John Dominic
Crossan, Marcus Borg, Amy Jill Levine, John Shelby Spong, Huston Smith, N. T.
Wright, David Ray Griffin, to name a few. And next weekend - Dr. Charles
Kimball.
If on Good Friday evening you were watching Peter Jennings on ABC News, you
know that Charles Kimball was one of the expert witnesses that he called. What
had happened was that Franklin Graham had conducted a service on Good Friday
for the Pentagon, and this created some criticism and some legitimate fear, for
Franklin Graham has spoken about Islam as an evil religion and Mohammed as
an evil leader, and has declared that Allah is not God. To have Franklin Graham
lead a service at the Pentagon probably put the fear of God into some hearts,
thinking, "Dear God, here we go with the Crusades again." Fortunately, Franklin
Graham is not going to lead a Crusade of sword into Iraq, but he does have his
troops poised at the border. The Samaritan's Purse, a relief organization that he
heads is ready to move into Iraq in order to make a witness for Jesus, thank God,
not with a sword, but with a cup of cold water, which is far better. But, the lack of
sensitivity created quite a stir, as well it might. And so, Charles Kimball, Wake
Forest University Professor of Comparative Religion, with his extensive
knowledge of the Middle East, having been there over 35 times over the last 25
years, an expert in Islam and himself a Christian theologian, was asked by Peter
Jennings about his reaction to that Pentagon service, which he indicated he
thought was, to say the least, unwise.
Then, if you continued your television watching, at 8:30 on CNN there was a
segment on the Bible and Iraq and there was a Muslim scholar who was asked
about the country in terms of their also being the children of Abraham, and once
again Charles Kimball was asked about this ancient civilization whose city Ur of
© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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the Chaldeans appeared in the scripture lesson this morning, and he was asked
particularly by the host about the claim of some that what is going on in the
Middle East now may be moving us toward the end of history and the final battle,
the Battle of Armageddon. So, once again, Charles Kimball was the person
selected to give commentary on that which is happening in our world today, so I
feel very privileged that at this time we have such a person coming into our midst
to help us to understand and discern what is going on in our world in terms of the
function and role of religion.
But, then I opened the Grand Rapids Press Religion section yesterday and there
kneeling in Westminster Cathedral was N. T. Wright, who was here last May, you
will remember. He was here with Marcus Borg and the two of them have written
a book together, The Meaning of Jesus: Two Visions. Tom Wright was written up
in the Grand Rapids Press yesterday because he has just published a book on the
resurrection, and he is probably the preeminent Christian scholar in the world
today and certainly in the New Testament biblical studies and theological
analysis. He is a brilliant scholar, a wonderful human being, and he has just been
promoted in the Church of England to be the Bishop of Durham, and I am told
the Bishop of Durham seat is the fourth highest seat in the Church of England.
So, once again, we have this man on the loose who has been in our midst who is
talking about the resurrection to us and the book that he has just written, 817
pages, could you believe, in which he does extensive research and thorough
analysis and with brilliant mind and elegant writing, talks about the resurrection
of Jesus.
You may remember when Marcus Borg and Tom Wright were here together. They
preached last Pentecost, and I had suggested to you that I didn't care which one
you followed, you could be right with Borg or wrong with Wright, it was up to
you. But, after that interesting weekend, certainly you got the sense that Marcus
Borg and Tom Wright had a different understanding of the Easter miracle, a
different understanding of that resurrection reality, although both took it very
seriously. There was an excerpt from Tom Wright's book in the most recent
Christian Century, and having read that, I read once again the authentic Tom
Wright as he set forth a traditional view of the resurrection which was precisely
the view with which I came here in 1960 fresh out of seminary (emphasizing
fresh). In his portrayal of this in the article, which is an excerpt from the book, we
have again the standard Christian understanding. Tom Wright is very clear about
the fact that Easter is a significant event, it is a cosmic event, it is world-shaping
event, it is far more than simply the fact that I shall have life after death. It is far
more than the fact that my sins are forgiven. Tom Wright is very clear about the
fact that what happened at Easter was the establishment of the beachhead of God
in this world and it was a world-shaping, world-determining event. But, he said it
all hinges on the tomb being empty.
And that is where I disagree with him. He insists that if the tomb was not empty,
if that body had not come out of the grave, then the whole thing is questionable.

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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Again, that is where I disagree with him because I want to say to him, "Tom, I
don't need a body coming out of a tomb. I don't need a confirmation miracle on
the part of God to see that what happened in Jesus was a life-changing, worldtransforming event." I want to say to him, "It's not about a corpse. It's not about
an empty tomb. It's about the presence of the risen one. It's about the fact that
this Jesus lived and the way he lived and the words he spoke and the deeds he
performed." I want to say to Tom, "Easter is about remembering Jesus and
celebrating the fact that Jesus crucified lives, that Jesus crucified is God
incarnate, and God crucified is God alive and well in this world." I don't need a
miracle. I don't need to see a body rise. All I have to do is look at Jesus. All I have
to do is linger with Jesus. All I have to do is let my being imbibe Jesus, the way he
was, the way he lived, the road less traveled that he followed.
Didn't you sense it again this Lenten season in which we were going through all of
the darkness in our world? Didn't you sense it Thursday night in the garden, the
anguish of the garden as he prayed and wept? Didn't you sense it on Good Friday
in the darkness? Easter is not to get out of the darkness. Easter is not to get away
from the cross. Easter is not to get away from the tragedy of this world. Easter is
not Easter lilies and bells and Hallelujahs. Easter is remembering Jesus, the
Jesus whose life was the incarnation of God, the Jesus in whom the eternal
infinite intention of God found flesh. Easter is about remembering Jesus whose
face shows us the heart of God. I don't need an empty tomb. I need Jesus, the
Jesus of Good Friday and the Jesus of Maundy Thursday, and the Jesus who set
his face to go to Jerusalem. I need the Jesus who spoke truth to power, the Jesus
who took children on his lap. The Jesus who respected women. I need the Jesus
full of compassion whose heart went out to the harassed people of his day. That's
enough for me.
Oh, the disciples were despairing and they were afraid at the crucifixion. Of
course, they were. They didn't know what to think and their hopes were dashed
and they went off to Galilee and they went fishing. But, eventually, inevitably,
they knew his presence still. They knew the presence of the risen Lord. They said,
"Jesus lives." They said, "Jesus is with us." There were moments of epiphany.
There were those strange encounters. There were breakfasts on the beach. There
was a fish dinner in one of their homes. He came into the midst of a room where
the doors were locked. He walked with two on the road to Emmaus and they
didn't know him until he broke bread and their eyes were opened and their hearts
burned, and they said, "My God! My God, he's alive!" Easter is not to get away
from the darkness. Easter is not to forget about Lent. Easter is not somehow or
other to plaster all the world's darkness with joy and light, whistling a happy tune
to make ourselves believe that it is other than it is. I don't need a miracle. I need
Jesus - the way he was, the way he lived. I need to remember him. I need to
remember him.
Last evening in our Easter Eve Vesper Service, I experienced communion as
powerfully as I have ever experienced it. It has for a decade been a wonderful

© Grand Valley State University

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Easter celebration to come to this table, to take bread and cup, to say, "The Lord
is risen. The body of Christ." But, I come to this Easter and realize the celebration
of the Lord's Supper is the most critical thing we can do on Easter because it is
remembering Jesus. It is remembering the way he was. It is remembering the life
he lived. It is remembering him, the words he spoke, the demeanor of his life. To
remember there was God. To remember that is the life, that is the way, that is the
truth. Of course, no one will ever come to God apart from that one, apart from
that way of being, for the God reflected in the fact of Jesus is not the God of
almighty power who snaps his finger and rolls a stone away.
That God is the vulnerable God, the crucified God, that God is the God of
persuasive love who stands by in our own world reeling on its way with all of the
tragedy and all of the bloodshed and all of the violence and all the war, waiting,
waiting, waiting and Jesus, that one human being, not only human being, but one
human being representative of what all human beings would be to fulfill the
intention of God. That Jesus, that human being, that divine intention in flesh,
that is the only hope of the world, and therefore, we come to this table.
Last night in the dramatic presentation, after the drama of the cross and the
empty tomb, Jesus came, and he had a cup and he had bread. Peter and John
came and knelt here and two of the women knelt here and he said to them, "Do
you remember the way I lived?"
They said, "We remember, Lord."
He said, "Do you remember the words I spoke?"
They said, "We remember."
And he said to them, "Do you remember the last night when I took bread and
cup?"
And they remembered.
Then he took the bread and the cup and he gave it to them and he said,
"Whenever you see those who are excluded, embraced, remember me. Whenever
you see one speak truth to power, remember me. Whenever you feel compassion
flow within you, remember me. Whenever you see the possibility for hope for a
new world, remember me." And each time they said, "We remember. We
remember. We remember.”
You see, I don't need an empty tomb. I don't need a corpse coming out of a grave.
I need to remember. I need to remember that impossible possibility, for there
has appeared that one who is the incarnation of the divine intention from all
eternity and it has appeared here and it lives with us still and beckons to us still,
the God of vulnerability beckoning us with the lure of love, to remember and to
be as he was in this world.

© Grand Valley State University

�The Impossible Possibility

Richard A. Rhem

Page 5	&#13;  

Oh, I know this old world reels on its way and you may say it's hopeless, and
sometimes I feel it is hopeless, and I have gone through this Lenten season with a
heavy heart full of despair, I have to confess it to you. I didn't even really want
Easter to come. But, then I remember old Abraham. What do you think he
thought when God said, "Leave your home and family and go to a place that I will
show you and I will make you a father of many nations. Your seed will be like the
stars in the heaven and the sands of the sea." And Abraham, an old man with an
old wife, but that is not all. Genesis 11:30, one of the most significant and
poignant statements in all of the Bible, tells us Sarah was barren. You see, when
God would do a new thing, when God would create a new people in order to
create a new world, God begins in human barrenness, because we have to do here
not with human possibility, but with the eternal God whose divine intention has
found flesh, for, Abraham and Sarah had a son, who had a son, who had sons
from whom came a people from which people came Jesus.
Jesus is the only hope of the world. Jesus is the way and the truth and the life.
There is no other possibility. The old world goes on its way and we still go on that
way. We still make war in order to find peace. And all the time, God is crucified
and Jesus pleads with us, "Remember. Remember. Remember me."
Come to this table. Remember Jesus. That is an Easter celebration.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>People of the Way
From the series: The Way of Peace/The Way of the Cross
Lent IV
Acts 9:1-2, Matthew 16:21-26
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
March 30, 2003
Transcription of the spoken sermon
Before there was any talk about Jesus as some kind of God figure, before there was
any talk about God as Triune, any Doctrine of the Trinity, there was a Jew named
Jesus, Jesus of Nazareth, a fully human being, and those who followed him believed
that he was God's Messiah. Messiah is a transliteration from the Hebrew and the
word means anointed. As you know, Messiah in Hebrew transliterates into English
from the Greek as Christ. So that early band of followers believed that Jesus, this
man that they knew to be fully human, was the anointed of God, and the special
anointed one who would deliver Israel from all of its troubles and establish the
dream, that marvelous, prophetic dream of the new Eden, that dream of the
harmony between God and creation, between God and humanity, between humanity
and creation and between human being and human being, that total harmony which,
in a word, is Shalom. Those who followed Jesus believed him to be the anointed one
of God to effect that dream. In so believing, they followed him with great
expectation.
The early followers were all Jewish and that Jewish movement became eventually a
largely Gentile movement, and tragically became separated from the womb of
Judaism and eventually became the Christian Church. The Jewish followers of Jesus,
following his crucifixion and resurrection, believed that he would come again,
because obviously their hopes and dreams for what the Messiah would do had not
happened. In the argument between the ongoing Jewish community and these
Jewish followers of Jesus, the argument about the Messiah came down to this: the
ongoing Jewish community said, "Messiah has come? Right, already! Look at the
world. This is the Messianic kingdom?" And, of course, a crucified Messiah did throw
the wrench into the machinery. How could they explain a crucified Messiah? Out of
that apocalyptic expectation came this whole idea of the Messiah who came would
come again, or the one who came would come as the Messiah. There were various
ideas floating around at that time. But, essentially, there was an ongoing Jewish
community who said," The Messiah is still to come. Just look at the world."

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And there was a Jewish Jesus community that said, "Messiah has come and will
come again shortly, imminently, and establish the kingdom according to all of our
hopes and dreams."
So, two communities, both of them expecting a Messiah because they really were one
community. But, one part of that community saying he is still to come, and the other
part of that community saying he has come and he is coming again to finish the
work.
If I could argue with both communities for a moment, I would say to the Jewish
community, "You are right in that you expect the Messiah to be a fully human being.
There is nothing in the Hebrew scriptures that would give the idea that the one who
would come anointed with the spirit of God was anything but human. There was the
expectation of a human being fully anointed with the spirit of God."
And I would say to the Christian community, "But you are right that Messiah has
come, that human being has arrived." And how are we going to put all of that
together? To the orthodox of the Jewish community expecting Messiah to come
through some great intervention of God to make it all right, and the Christian
community expecting Messiah to return as a great act of God to make it all right, I
would say, "Both of you are expecting one to come and a great intervention of God to
make it all right. One of you believes that one has come. The other believes that one
is still coming. I want to say to both of you, nobody is coming."
To the Jewish community, I want to say, "You are right. The one who came was
human."
To the Christian community, I want to say, "You're right. That one has come. When
the word was made flesh and dwelt among us."
And I want to say to both Jewish and Christian communities there is no future grand
act of God out there. God has acted in one Jesus, fully human, full of the spirit, and
the final revelation of God is in the embodiment of the human in Jesus, not just
Jesus alone, but Jesus as the model or paradigm of the intention of God. If there was
a universal embodiment of that which Jesus embodied, we would realize the Shalom
of the prophet's dream. The way of Jesus is the way of peace. And the people who
gathered around him began to be called People of the Way.
If we go to the text of the morning for a moment, Jesus was very clear about what lay
ahead of him. I think those verses in Matthew 16 are stylized after the fact, crucified
and on a third day rise again, and all of that. That prediction is just too neat. If it was
all that simple and clear ahead of time, why all the confusion?
But, on the other hand, it is understandable that Jesus with his followers would have
talked about the inevitability of what lay before him. Must they not have gathered in
the evening and talked about where they were and what was happening, and what
would happen tomorrow, and did not Jesus know that the way of peace would

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become the way of the cross? So, to talk about that was not predictive prophecy, it
was just awareness and common sense. Was not the fate of the prophet traditionally
to be rejected, to suffer and to die? Did they not have John the Baptist in their own
recent experience who was killed by the king? And so, they talked about it and then
Jesus said, "If anybody would follow me, let him take up his cross daily. If anyone
would be my follower, my disciple, it will involve a daily taking up of the cross and a
following in my way. And you ought to know that it is a dangerous and serious
business, because you do so at the risk of your life, for if you follow me, it will cost
you your life. But, ironically, thereby you will find life." That was the clear claim and
call of Jesus, "Follow me, cross, loss of life, which is life.
To take up one's cross is a dangerous and a serious business, and it ought not to be
done, Jesus said, without clarity. No subterfuge, no fudging here. Oh, we speak often
about bearing our cross. People often sympathize with Nancy being married to me
and she says, "Yes, it is just the cross I bear." Well, that is not the cross she bears, it
is just lack of judgment and bad luck. To bear your cross is a deliberate and
voluntary act, in this case, of discipleship and becoming one of the people of the way.
There were those who followed him that believed in him and they made the choice,
and a community began to grow so that, having crucified Jesus to get him out of the
way, was not to do away with the threat after all, and so there continued to be
persecution, first of all within the Sadducean Temple crew because this community
was a threat to that established order.
Paul, in all of his zeal and all of his good Hebrew faith, was on his way to do damage
to the people of the way when he is turned around in his tracks and now he begins to
see that this one was, indeed, God's anointed one, and he becomes the flaming
evangelist throughout that ancient world. Finally, returning to Jerusalem to worship,
he is recognized by some who knew him in Ephesus and they point him out and they
have him arrested, and eventually he comes before the Roman governor, and now
this one who was about to stamp out the people of the way acknowledges before the
Roman governor, "I am of the way which my brothers and sisters call a sect." That's
what we do in the religious game, of course. Any other group that gets a little bit
fuzzy on the edges we call a sect or a cult. That is what was happening. This was an
inter-Jewish story. All of these people were Jewish. Paul was never anything but a
Jew. The disciples were never anything but Jewish. The early community was
nothing but Jewish, and Paul had hoped that this Messiah, Jesus, could be
incorporated within the covenant faith of Israel. There was no reason in the world
why there had to be a break and a fracture. Nonetheless, the Roman imperial power
could not allow this community to flourish, because finally it was Rome that saw the
threat to its empire. Finally it was Rome that crucified Jesus.
We know about the Roman persecution of that early movement. Go to Rome and
visit the catacombs and see eloquent witness to the persecution of those people and
how they had to worship down in the bowels of the earth. Rome could not
countenance a religious movement that would not bow down to the imperial throne.
Rome didn't really care how many sacrifices you offered or how many candles you
burned. The one thing Rome said was, "Acknowledge that Caesar is Lord and you

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can be anything else." In the Christian community, the followers of Jesus, the people
of way, said, "That is precisely what we cannot do, because the one we followed
challenged that whole confession of Caesar as Lord. No, Caesar is not Kyrios, Jesus is
Kyrios, the most elemental, simple and clear confession of that early movement.
Jesus is Lord. Jesus is Lord over against Caesar is Lord. You cannot have it both
ways.
And so, for the first three centuries of that Jesus movement, now tragically having
been aborted from its Jewish home and family, now largely a Gentile phenomenon,
nonetheless keeping alive the dangerous memory of Jesus, these people were hunted
and haunted and persecuted because they didn't fit. They did not fit into the imperial
structure. They did not serve in the military. They were advocates of non- violence
like Jesus was. They lived an entirely different kind of life. They were an alternative
society, because people of the way were followers of the way, the way of Jesus, which
was the way of peace. They were followers of the way of Jesus, which was the way of
non-violence. They did not fit and, as Jesus had said, it is risky business, but if you
take the risk, you find your life.
I don't think Constantine made some pious discovery about Jesus Christ. I think
Constantine and the cynicism of imperial power saw the vitality of this community
and finally recognized them and let them be and within a couple of decades the
Christian Church was the established religion of the empire. Marvelous, wasn't it?
Except it cost the Church its soul, because the Church had been a movement of
people of the way in the way of Jesus, which was the way of peace. Now they were a
part of that apparatus of power.
About a century later, St. Augustine, one of the greatest thinkers of the Church,
wrestled with that issue. St. Augustine knew good and well that love was at the heart
of Jesus' message, knew well enough that there had been three plus centuries of
generally pacifist response to imperial power, but now what do you do when you are
in power? He wrestled with that in all of his intellectual acuteness, and constructed
what is still known as the Just War theory which struggled with this issue as to when
a Christian can go to war, when military action can be justified, and a whole series of
criteria by which that is to be judged. It is still alive today. It has been debated and
argued over the centuries, but as far as the West and Christendom is concerned,
there has never been a power that I know of that has gone to war without trying to
justify it in terms of the Just War theory which goes back to Augustine. So, it has
made a difference, even in imperial power. The dangerous memory of Jesus has
haunted those who have named his name and wanted to be considered a part of the
way.
Now, we are at war, and so we hope and pray for its speedy ending, we hope and pray
for as little tragedy and devastation as possible, we hope and pray for the safety of all
of those in harm's way, but there is something more going on in our world today. I
think as never before, there is a global conversation about peace. I suppose it has
been enabled by the world-wide web. I have gotten more significant documents over
the internet these past weeks than I can remember. I am aware of networks that

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circle the globe. There are conversations going on everywhere and there are
demonstrations for peace around the world. Even as the war is being executed, there
are those who are speaking of peace, and of the fact that in our world today,
war is a luxury we can no longer afford. I am hopeful this morning, because I do
believe that we may well be on the threshold of a whole new era of global peace.
This last twentieth century, at least in its first half, was the most violent in recorded
history. There was the First World War and all of that tragedy, there was the
Communist revolution and all of the death of the Stalin era. There was the rise of
totalitarianism, Naziism in Germany and that awful Holocaust. There was the
Second World War with all of the destruction and death. It was continuation of the
war system. And then the world was divided up into two blocs, East and West, and
we lived for some four decades in a balance of terror.
Don't you remember the balance of terror? Don't you remember living under the
shadow of the mushroom cloud? Two massive powers with missiles pointed at each
other, knowing that to strike was to be struck, knowing that to strike was to
annihilate and to be annihilated? Ironically, that balance of terror kept violence at a
minimum. But, there was oppression and despotism. People were suffering, and the
people began this movement which, in the Soviet Union and the Eastern bloc, began
to erode the power structures. Do you remember the prayer meetings in Leipzig and
the lighting of the candles, the candle vigils in those German cities? Do you
remember our growing anticipation of the possibility that this deadlock might be
broken? Do you remember the euphoria of the falling of the Berlin Wall? And even
after the dissolution of the Soviet bloc, with all the unraveling of Yugoslavia, and the
Balkan tragedy, nonetheless, there is a conversation, there is a people-power afoot.
In that balance of terror between the East and the West, someone has said that was
the powerlessness of the powerful. Right? Powerlessness of the powerful. We were
crippled, mutually crippled by the power of the other.
Yaclav Havel, the former President of the Czech Republic, who is a philosopher and a
poet, you might expect, has suggested that the people-power today is the power of
the powerless. I love that. The world may be at war right now, but there is a
conversation going on. There is a subversive conversation which can trace itself back
to the dangerous memory of Jesus, and I don't even care if you don't want to find it
in Jesus. Find it in the Dalai Lama, if you will. But, Desmond Tutu found it in Jesus
and he was here last week in the area to say how what seemed just a few short years
ago to have to issue in a terrible bloodbath could issue in a peace and a reconciliation
because of people-power.
The people are powerful. In the Vietnam era, they dethroned a President. And the
Secretary of Defense during that era just a short time ago, with tears, repented of his
part in that American military venture. Dear friends, we are not hopeless nor
helpless. For all of the distortions of the Church, for all of the corruptions of the
Church, the dangerous memory of Jesus is still kept alive when the bread is broken

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and the cup is poured out, when he said, "Do you want to really live at the risk of
your life? Follow me. Take up your cross and follow me."
He was a dreamer, he was a prophet, he was a threat to established order, he was a
visionary, he was a de-stabler. Don't you love him? Don't you want to follow him?

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                    <text>Memory and Solidarity
From the series: The Way of Peace/The Way of the Cross
I Corinthians 11:23-26; Luke 14:7-14
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
Lent I, March 9, 2003
Transcription of the spoken sermon
We have entered the Lenten season again and it is always a rather sober and
serious time in our own contemplations and in our worship together. Generally
my Lenten theme is set before I go on vacation, but this year, because Easter was
late and because the world situation is so volatile, I thought I would wait until I
got home. Finally one has to set a Lenten theme and, given the subject of Lent
and the state of the world, I chose the theme which is nothing new, and yet needs
to be said again in faithfulness to the Christian faith. That is, that the way of
peace is the way of the cross.
In our practice we begin the Lenten season at the table, and we come to that table
in the words of Paul quoting the tradition, in the words of Jesus, "Do this in
remembrance of me." While we were always gathered in the name of Jesus, when
we come to the table in a special way, we come to remember the way he was, and
in this critical time in the world, when we are teetering on the brink of war, it is
important for us again to remember in order that that memory might lead us into
solidarity with the way of Jesus.
As I say that, I am reminded of the point at which in my life Jesus became
important to me. That may sound strange to you because I had a Jesus-saturated
life from childhood. But, the Jesus of my childhood and youth and my early years
and the early years of my ministry was the Jesus who was the divine son of God
who came into this world in order to offer himself a sacrifice for our sins in order
that we might be forgiven and go to heaven. Jesus was an episodic event in the
history of the world; he was God's action on our behalf in order that God's justice
might be satisfied, human guilt removed, the penalty removed, and heaven be
accessed. Because that reflects a rather high Christology – the second person of
the Trinity donning the garments of our humanity, executing that redemptive
action and then returning to the Father – one would think that that rather exalted
Christology would have been the period of my life when I would have stood in
awe of Jesus Christ. As a matter of fact, I fell in love with Jesus when I began to
see him as a flesh and blood human being. I have repeated this before here, but if
you could go back in the archives of Christ Community, I think it was a Lenten
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sermon, "Jesus, You Are Really Somebody!" when I began to see him other than
this divine savior figure who dips in and exits again, in the meantime allowing
God to embrace us. I began to see him in his humanity in what he embodied,
what was incarnate in him, what came to expression in him. When I began to see
that, then I really stood in awe of Jesus. From that moment on I have been
troubled every Lenten season when I try to preach the Jesus that I have come to
respect and admire, the one with whom I would be in solidarity. The reason that
Lenten preaching is troubling for me is that to preach the Jesus, that I have come
to see and to understand is to preach a Jesus who seems like such a hopeless
romantic, such a Utopian idealist, that even to bother with him seems like an
exercise in futility. I can understand in part why that is so difficult for me, for the
likes of us, because his social location, his historical context was so totally
different from ours.
I have here a paragraph from the prologue of a book by Richard Horseley and
Neil Silverman, a book entitled The Message of the Kingdom, which locates Jesus
in the concrete history of his time. Let me read a paragraph to you:
The history has almost always been written from the viewpoint of those
who build cities and conquer empires, but in the New Testament and the
early Christian tradition, we may be able to catch a rare glimpse at the
hopes, dreams and Utopian visions of those who suddenly find themselves
at the bottom of a new civilization's social heap. In this book we will argue
that the earliest Christianity was a movement that boldly challenged the
heartlessness and arrogance of a vast governmental bureaucracy run on
unfairly apportioned tax burdens and guided by cynical special interest
that preached about opportunities, self-reliance and personal achievement
while denying all three to the vast majority of men, women and children
over whom they had presumed to rule. Christianity arose in a remote and
poverty-stricken region of the vast Roman Empire among the struggling
farm families of a frontier province that could only be classed as
chronically underdeveloped by modern economic criteria. Yet, even after
the movement's first great prophet was condemned as a threat to civil
order and put to death for his preaching, his followers spread a coalescing
gospel of resistance from the country to the city, from the eastern
provinces of the empire to the far western edges of the Roman world.
That is what I mean to say about the difficulty that we have in identifying with
Jesus and following Jesus, because our social location, our historical context is so
totally different. It is one thing for a prophetic or charismatic figure in a situation
of grinding poverty where the imperial policy of urbanization was moving people
off their land and where they were more and more sucked into that situation of
hopelessness and powerlessness. It is one thing to be a leader of a renewal
movement in such a context and to say all sorts of things about the established
power, the system that keeps it all intact. It is another thing when one happens to
be the imperial power to claim to follow such a leader. That is my dilemma. We

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come to this table in order to remember, to remember the way he was, in order to
be in solidarity with him and it is really hopeless.
Jesus' situation was that of Rome and its great imperial power had its client King
Herod on the throne locally, and the religious establishment, the temple
establishment, all collaborating with the local client-king and the overarching
imperial power to keep the social situation at rest. Rome demanded its tribute.
Herod demanded taxes. The priesthood demanded tithes and offerings. And the
people lived disoriented lives, disrupted existence in awful poverty. And so, there
was that small percentage at the top who kept everything in order and lived very
well, thank you very much, the vast majority of folks living in hopelessness and
helplessness and powerlessness, and it was Jesus who was able to trigger
something in those people, to give them again a sense of hope and of possibility.
It was Jesus who made his way to Jerusalem and who did some kind of prophetic
act in the temple which earmarked him as dangerous and resulted in his violent
death. Every time we see the table, we have the bread which is broken and the
cup which is poured out and we are reminded that when body and blood are
separated, it is a mark of violence. If you die at peace in your own bed, body and
blood remain one. If you die in violence, blood is spilled, body is broken.
Jesus, in his way of peace, was led to the way of the cross, and we remember it.
For 2000 years we have remembered it. But, do we really want to retrieve that
dangerous memory? Is it possible to follow Jesus, being who we are, the
American empire?
Some things have come together for me recently. I think all of us wonder what is
going on. I think we are confused; we want to believe in our nation; we value our
natural vision, our principles, freedom, democracy, rule of law, respect for human
dignity. What a wonderful gift we share together. But, what in the world are we
doing? Just somewhat recently I began to understand that there are those who
are in leading positions of authority in this nation who have a vision of empire.
They don't want to conquer nations and occupy people and territory, but they
believe that western democracy and the free economy at this point in history
should be imposed on the whole world. If you want to read about that, you can,
and you read about that not by what opponents are saying about these people;
you read about it according to the programmatic documents of this group, which
includes our Vice President Richard Cheney, our Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld, who are a part of a group, a Project for a New American Century.
It is a matter of record that in 1992 after the implosion of the Soviet Union,
Richard Cheney, then Secretary of Defense, commissioned a study about a
unipolar world. The Cold War had been a bipolar world. Now this was a moment
in history to be exploited. It was possible now, with the one remaining
superpower with our overwhelming wealth and our overwhelming military might,
to create a unipolar world of which we and western values would be the center.
The Gulf War derailed that temporarily, but that paper became the blueprint for a

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program which was promulgated two months before the last presidential
election, in which it was being advocated that this is the moment for that unipolar
world to be imposed through our overwhelming military and economic power,
and that we create the Pax Americana, the American Peace.
Now, you are familiar with the phrase Pax Romana, that 200-plus period of time
when the Roman Imperial forces were scattered across that vast empire and there
was relative peace, fewer troops under arms and fewer civilians being killed in
wars. The Pax Romana, the Roman Peace. It was an imposed peace, but it was a
peaceful period.
There is another period of empire, the British Empire from about 1800 to 1917
which was, likewise, a period of quite relative tranquility in the world and
unprecedented economic growth. So, empire can be argued for, and what is being
argued for is American empire, imposing our value system around the globe. We
have the military might and the economic power in order to do it. And so, in
order to get there, Iraq is the first step along the way. The reason that we have
had such a hard time convincing the world that Iraq needs to be dealt with is
because there is a recognition that it is our movement toward the American
Empire. Those who advocate this are not demons. They have a philosophy, a
vision. They would impose all of the things that we value on the whole world. One
can argue for that.
However, it is very difficult to go there without a kind of arrogance, the hubris of
empire, and also the fact of self-serving our own interests and security needs. To
cover the globe with American power backed up militarily, to work the globe
economically, that is a program. I can show you the blueprint and I have to ask
myself as a follower of Jesus, do I want to go there? It is not so simple. You are
dealing with an underdog with Jesus, and now you are dealing with a top dog. We
who are top dogs are asking how we can follow Jesus who was the leader of the
underdog. Maybe we ought to just be honest and say, "Jesus you were better off
when you were a personal savior who died for my sins and brought my soul to
heaven, but don't meddle in the concrete social, historical, political, economic
affairs of the world." Maybe we ought to just say it, because that is the real
situation.
The papal envoy comes to Washington, photo ops, handshakes. You can say
whatever you want about Pope John; I have my arguments with the Pope, but he
is a man of great integrity and great humanity and certainly knows the real, gritty
human situation politically, coming from Poland where he did. The new
Archbishop of Canterbury, Owen Williams just enthroned, appointed by the
Prime Minister and the Queen, pleads with his prime minister not to go to war.
Nobody is listening. The National Council of Churches, which represents a broad
spectrum of churches in this country, sends a delegation to the President. It
doesn't make any difference. The whole world church, except, ironically, the
fundamentalist wing of the Christian Church, but the whole classic Christian

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tradition is calling for a halt to the war machine. It is not happening. So, how
honestly, how authentically can we come to the table and remember Jesus? How
can we sing, "I Want to be a Christian In My Heart?" How can we arise and go to
Jesus?
There have been a couple of individuals who seem to have learned their political
tactics from Jesus - Gandhi (of course, he was assassinated), Martin Luther King
(of course, he was assassinated). Jesus was closer to a Palestinian suicide bomber
than anything in the US of A, with this critical difference, that Jesus was
committed to non-violent resistance.
It seems to me that the path we are on will lead to a world in which we are totally
dominant, and in which there are all kinds of Palestinian suicide bombers who
are powerless and voiceless and have only one way to respond, which is through
terror. I think we are going to have a world which we are going to dominate
militarily and a world in which we are going to be living in fear continually,
because we are continuing that cycle of using power to dominate, rather than
using power to change the world.
What would happen if our power and our resources were committed to the poor
and the lame and the blind, to the hopeless and the powerless? What would
happen if, in this era of a unipolar world, that one pole took Jesus seriously?
I'm not preaching this. This is what I wrestle with; this is what troubles me; this
is what I would invite you to think about in this Lenten journey. As one concrete
suggestion: What if we were to read every day during Lent Matthew 5, 6 and 7,
the Sermon on the Mount?
For years I didn't preach on the Sermon on the Mount. It didn't make any sense.
And now, on the edge of senility, I think it may be the only thing that makes
sense, unless we are ready to see it all blow up.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>Honestly Human
From the series: Religion and the Human Story
Romans 7:14-25; Mark 2:18-28
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
March 2, 2003
Transcription of the spoken sermon
Religion has damaged as many people throughout the centuries as it has healed. I
say that not as a shocking opening statement, I say that not to be provocative, I
say that because I really believe that. Religion has had a tendency to become
oppressive and to lead people into depression rather than into liberation,
freedom, and joy.
I met a person, in this case a woman, this past week whom I had not seen for over
forty years, and over forty years ago she was what one would call a deeply
spiritual person, and I say that positively, a woman of prayer, prayer circles,
missionary activity, great piety and devotion. When I saw her this week after forty
years, I was surprised at her face. Someone has said you could tell a great deal
about a person from his or her face. Her face did not reflect to me joy, pleasure,
delight, or a certain lightness of being. Her face, her visage communicated to me
a certain heaviness, even grumpiness. I thought to myself that all of the intense,
sincere and serious cultivation of the spiritual life, for all of that, she did not
strike me as being very happy.
Not so long ago I took a book down from the shelf that I hadn't touched in a long
time, blew the dust off and it flopped open to a spot where there was a small
brochure. It was produced in the early 60s when I was here the first time. We
weren't called Christ Community at that time; the other name will not be
mentioned. There I was with my picture on it, of course, just fresh out of
seminary, and my visage communicated in that picture, a serious, moral,
completely dedicated, young man, young old man, and in that little brochure we
had a number of affirmations, all very orthodox which we surely believed. I was
embarrassed and amused as I looked at it. So, I took it to Duba's on Tuesday to
the luncheon and gave it to Duncan Littlefair just so he would know the kind of
persons he, was hanging out with. The next week he came to the table and said to
the table, "I want to show you a story of salvation," and he held up that brochure
with my picture and he said, "This man was lost." And then he pointed at me and
he said, "Look at his face. He has been saved." That's a true story and I know
existentially that it is true.
© Grand Valley State University

	&#13;  

�Honestly Human

Richard A. Rhem

Page 2	&#13;  

To be human is to be a creature in conflict. It is to be a creature living with a
constant tension. The Apostle Paul knew that and that famous seventh chapter of
Romans I can never read without feeling the intensity of Paul's own inward
struggle. There is a long history of interpretation of that passage. It is amazing
what people get out of that passage. I am not going to bore you with all of that
interpretation all over the map. I think it is enough to read it and to say Paul
knew the excruciating pain of being a creature living in tension.
W. H. Auden, in the little quote in your liturgy, says, "There are times when
wouldn't we like to be unreflective animals? Or disembodied spirits?" because
either way, no problem. Don't we know in the depths of our being that about
which Paul was writing? Of course we do. Krister Stendahl says that for Paul this
was a midrash on the Genesis story of the fall, because Paul was trying to
understand how he could affirm the Torah, the way of life, the law of God, how he
could affirm that in his inward being and do such a miserable job of fulfilling it.
How could he will to do one thing and do another?
Have you ever been there? Don't we know? Is not there that within us that would
soar and love and grace and bless and affirm, and that within us which is dark,
mean, and that which makes us blush? That is the human situation. St. Paul
would say it is because we are fallen creatures. I don't happen to agree with Paul
on that one. I don't think it is because we are fallen creatures, I think it is because
we are human creatures. Here we are, after eons and eons and eons of time, of
evolutionary process that has brought about creatures like us who carry with us
all of the animality of our background rooted in the dust of the earth, and
creatures who have become aware, conscious, susceptible to the lure of love, able
at times to soar into transcendent realms and ecstatic joy. We are not fallen. We
are just human, and to be honestly human is to recognize that conflict within
which is a given, with being human beings such as we are.
In the wisdom of the ancient church, it was that tension within that gave rise to
Mardi Gras. I became aware of that rather late in life, too. It was the covering of
the parade in New Orleans, I suppose some few years ago, when the commentator
spoke about the wisdom of the ancient church in giving people an opportunity to
cut loose, to blow off steam and get it all out of their system before they entered
into the darkness and the solemnity of that season of Lent when they were called
to self-denial and contemplation. It immediately made sense to me that the
church jn its best wisdom has understood the nature of the human which it is
explained as a term of being fallen or whether it is understood, as we do today,
with psychological insight and behavioral sciences, etc., that it is simply the given
with being what we are. Nonetheless, in the wisdom of the church, the whole
being needs to be recognized and ownership taken.
Some years ago when Gertrud Mueller Nelson was here and we were introduced
to her wonderful book on the celebration of the seasons, Dance With God. I was
struck with her description of Carnival, and the purpose of Carnival and the

© Grand Valley State University

�Honestly Human

Richard A. Rhem

Page 3	&#13;  

acknowledgment of that shadow side that is within all of us and that need for
ownership thereof and release of, but release of in some measured and controlled
manner.
Martin Marty says that the church is afraid to allow us ecstasy, because ecstasy
actually from the Greek sfotis, out of that state in which one is, or to be out of
oneself; or to be beside oneself, to be crazy. The suggestion is that now and again
we should be given permission simply to be crazy. In the rituals of the church, to
the extent that they are healthy and human-enhancing, they will provide those
channels whereby we can tap our feet and be ushered into delight and know the
taste of sheer joy.
I love to watch the children when the jazz ensemble or the musicians are singing
on a day like this. I saw Greg Martin's little daughter doing her thing. She's got
the rhythm, Greg, she was replicating you right there in the pew, and when I see
that happen, I know there is something right about that. In contrast to the little
child who, sitting next to her mother, was turning around and making eye contact
and smiling with all those around until her mother reined her in, gave her a
squeeze and said, "Remember you're in church."
Gordon Cosby, who is the founder of that well-publicized and marvelous ministry
in Washington D.C., the Church of the Saviour, tells about a time when he was
invited by a New England congregation to come up and preach at a midweek
Lenten service, and he said the service was so dull and uninspiring, the only thing
that moved in the whole service were the offering plates. He and his wife left
rather down and dispirited and the congregation had secured for them a room in
the village, and it happened to be over the tavern, and he and his wife retired to
their room and beneath them were emanating the sounds of music and laughter
and joy, and he looked at his wife and said, "You know, if Jesus came to this
village tonight, I think he'd join the crowd at the tavern rather than the crowd at
the church."
And I know that existentially also, because that young man who was in the pulpit
here for those early years of 1960s, oh, it is painful to remember. But, I went to
Williamsburg, Virginia not so long after that and, in a tour of the colonial
buildings, there was this lovely hall on a second floor in the middle of that little
village restored, and the guide spoke about the fact that in this room – which was
light with windows and chair stacked and here and there great barrels of wine
vats, nice hardwood floor – the guide said here the social life of the community
took place. There were often Saturday evening dances, he said, and then the
chairs would be set up for divine worship on Sunday morning. I thought, "Bingo!
The only part of that story I know is Sunday morning, because I've never danced
a step, let alone a two-step, and wine never touched my lips apart from the
Eucharist." I know I am not preaching to many of you. There are a few dinosaurs
like me out there, but just let me get this off my chest. You can just go out of here
and thank God that you didn't know that kind of repressive religious experience,

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and yet I know I also speak for a good measure of religion which is in control and
which, as Martin Marty says, is afraid to let us experience something of the divine
madness which honors that part of our humanity which is also authentically
human.
Jesus, it seems to me, had the balance right. He was accosted by the religious
guardians of tradition for the fact that his disciples didn't carry on the fast. Maybe
they didn't keep Lent. He said to them, "Look, you can't fast when the
bridegroom is here." And then he was trying to say something new is a-birthing
and you simply cannot take that which is new and cram it into old containers
because it bursts the containers. And then they were going through the grain
fields and the disciples picked the grain for their own need on the Sabbath, which
again brought that conflict situation: why do they do that which is not lawful on
the Sabbath? Jesus said there is precedent for that. The meeting of human need
transcends the ritual prescription for the keeping of the Sabbath. And then he
said, "Look, the Sabbath, this marvelous gift of God, has been for humankind, not
humankind for the Sabbath."
It is so easy in our religious observances, it is so easy for those of us who are in
charge, it is so easy for us to forget that it is all for the enrichment and the
enhancement of your humanity lived before the face of God. With Jesus, there
was that ability to discriminate between the authentic observance and the
honoring of that which was even deeper, which was authentic human need. The
church doesn't live very easily with that kind of freedom because Luke and
Matthew we are told followed Mark a decade or two later. Mark's gospel, that we
read this morning, has that statement of Jesus, the Sabbath was made for the
human, not the human for the Sabbath. When Matthew and Luke picked up that
particular story, in both Matthew and Luke that statement was deleted. I think
the elders got together and said, "You know what? That is just too dangerous. You
can't trust the people to make that decision, and so we had better delete it."
It is a beautiful thing, really, when one can celebrate the full spectrum of being, to
come in here this morning to the sounds of joy. I caught you smiling and tapping
your feet because something deep down in you was being tapped, because there is
something marvelous about the experience of sheer joy and delight. And then, it
will be also a goose-bump experience on Wednesday evening at the opening of
Lent when you will come here to a dimmed sanctuary and kneel and I will place
the ashes on your forehead in the sign of the cross reminding you that dust you
are and to dust you will return.
So, you see, to be honestly human is to be able on Tuesday night to have pancakes
dripping with butter and sloshing with syrup, bacon deep in grease and sausage
that won't quit, raise a glass and party a while, and then come here to identify
with the lamb of God who loved us and gave himself for us. It is not either/or. It
is both/and. That is to be honestly human. That is to be all that God intends us to

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Richard A. Rhem

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be, and when we live that way, then I suspect that increasingly with age, with
wrinkles and creases, our visage will reflect joy.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>Institution and Community
From the series: Religion and the Human Story
Psalm 84; Ephesians 3:14-21
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
February 23, 2003
Transcription of the spoken sermon
Religion is a constant and human experience. It has always been every place and
every time. People have been religious because religion is that response to the
mystery that encounters us in the midst of our lives when we face those ultimate
questions, when we wonder about that from which we have issued and what the
issue of our lives will be. Someone has a vision, someone has an illumination,
the story of it is told and it finds resonance in other minds and hearts; a
community forms, and the community formed begins to live in that story, that
fresh experience. Then the community, living in that story, begins eventually,
gradually to move away from the fresh blush of the experience and thus it is
necessary, in order to introduce others to the community and to the experience,
to tell the story. But gradually it is necessary, as well, to find ways to order that
community in its life. And then the order and the structures, that are put in
place in order to allow the community to continue, take on greater importance,
and eventually that fresh blush of experience is over and there is no one around
anymore that remembers that experience or had entered into its vitality and its
joy. Then it becomes a matter of telling the story and reliving the story.
But now, increasingly, those forms and structures by which the community is
shaped take on greater importance and then, at some time or other, those forms
and structures become, as it were, an end in themselves and those who were
charged with the responsibility for the institution seek to preserve it and to
perpetuate it and seek its stability and its solidity and more and more energy,
time and resource is put into the buoying up of the forms and the structures.
Gradually, the initial experience that gave it its birth is forgotten or becomes
only a distant memory and that which called that community into being in the
first place is no longer the primary center of its life and its vision.
Do you follow me? Isn't that what happens? It is natural. That is just plain what
happens. It is kind of an inevitability, because experience finally needs to be
somehow or other structured and, in order to be passed on, needs to have those

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kinds of institutional forms that are somewhat objective and tangible. So,
eventually, that which was the first blush of experience is moved to second place
in favor of the institutional forms that keep it going. But it has often been lost
and the spirit bound. That is just the way it is.
Spirit without form fades. Form is necessary if spirit would be passed on. But,
the moment the spirit takes form, the seeds of death are in the movement. That
is just the way it is.
Today this community has to attend to its forms and its structures. Thank God
for us the institutional forms are minimal and the amount of time and energy
we give to it is minimal, but we have to do that, and we are going to do that
today. So, I thought it might be a good thing for us for a few moments to think
about institution and community and the relationship and the tensions.
This community was born in a burst of grace and joy and renewal in the 70s. It
simply exploded. The growth went off the charts. There was a marvelous spirit
of freedom and flexibility, and although we had inherited old forms, we had a
whole new life and there has always been here a marvelous relationship of trust
between the pastors and the people, so that the people entrusted us simply to
flow with the spirit and to move, to catch the wave. What happened was that we
had a marvelous experience together, but we were working around our
structures rather than through our structures. We had inherited a form of
governance that came out of the 17th century and, when I began to address that
issue with this congregation, it was the only time I addressed something in
which there was real hesitancy to go along with the truth. I think there was a bit
of hesitancy to change those old governmental structures because, after all, they
had been around for a long time and, if I got too far out of line, they could
always call those old structures back into function.
Eventually, after 20 years, we changed our form of government. We went from
the historic Consistory made up of Elders and Deacons, the structure which was
still in place but was being worked around rather than through, to a form of
government that reflected two basic concerns that I had, or two insights that I
had. One was that a community like this has a ministry function and a
management function and, in the old structure, the same people had to do both.
Few people are gifted in both areas, and so one gifted in prayer yawned while we
talked about the people, and ones who talked about putting on a new roof
yawned while others talked about prayer. Out of the new structure, finally, we
have a council for management and a council for ministry. This past Monday
night I was able to go to both. They don't usually fall on the same night, but in
the Operations Council we were putting the final touches on the budget. Then I
went to the Ministry Council where we were talking about people and program
and all that kind of thing, and it was a paradigm, a model for me of the kind of

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structure that we have now where there are people who are gifted in one area,
who are using their best gifts and strengths in that area for the church, and
people with other gifts in the other area working at the point of their strength,
as well.
I knew one other thing. Historically there are people who are all excited about
the life of the congregation and, where there is a Board of Trustees, they are
usually crusty, old, sort of elitist, well-heeled people. You could trace this back
in the history of the church. The people who are all excited about doing things
and make these proposals come up against the Board of Trustees and, boom, it
is dead. I didn't want that to happen. So, my suggestion was that from ministry
and management, from both councils, there come two people each to meet in
the Board of Trustees, along with two people at large that you choose, so that
the Board of Trustees would be a place where ministry and management would
clash and collide and collude and work together, and you would have the final
say about those at large people, one of whom would chair that Board of
Trustees. I mention that because not many of you have the foggiest idea of how
we operate in our structures here. You don't care. I hope you never really
investigate too thoroughly. That is the way it works and it is really a wonderful,
efficient and effective form of governance for a community such as this. It
works.
Today when we attend to that minimal structure of institution, I want to call you
to the valuing and the awareness and the continual commitment to community,
because forms and structures are necessary, but it is community that is far more
important. I want you to be reminded that we are a community because there is
something that has called us together and it is that which has called us together
that creates the uniqueness of our life, and that which has called us together is
that which we must nurture and must always cherish. The institutional forms
can come and go, but that which is at the heart of our life - those are the things
of which we must be aware and attentive in order that we can keep that blush
alive and fresh.
We are a people who have been marked by grace and that is not just a
theological word. That means that we are a people who concretely open our
arms to everyone and exclude no one. It is the concrete experience of being
accepted in the name of God by the grace of Jesus Christ into this community.
Whomever you are, from wherever you come, whatever your history, you are
welcome here. It says that rather eloquently on the back of our liturgy and we
print it every week. People who read it for the first time continue to say, "That's
good!" We are a community which has not been content simply to reiterate old
creeds and follow old ways. We have been a community with intellectual
curiosity that has probed the faith, that has tried to come to an understanding
through the use of critical rationality. We have used our minds and our reason

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in order to probe the history and the development of the tradition so that what
we confess and what we believe and that which shapes our lives is that which we
can authentically own as our own. And we are a community that has been
marked by care, by compassion, by genuine community, the arms of grace and
love. That is what has drawn us together, and that is what has made our life
what it is.
A rather astute young man said to me not so long ago, "Dick, I really like what
you do, but aren't you working yourself out of a job?" I said, "Yes and no. If you
mean am I working myself out of a job if my job consists of leading a
congregation that claims to hold absolute truths, that claims to possess the keys
to the kingdom of heaven, that has an authoritarian rule over which people's
lives are proscribed, or if you mean because Christ Community is the opposite of
all those things that I am out of a job, then you are right, because we have given
up here the claim to absolute truth. We have given up here that claim to
authoritarian rule. We have given up here that kind of institutional dogmatism
which has been so much a part of the traditional church scene."
I said to him, "No, I haven't worked myself out of a job if you mean community,
if you mean creating a place and a space where the spiritual life can be lived,
where questions can be asked, where people can come together because we are
social animals, after all, where people can come together for mutual support,
mutual encouragement, for the enhancement of our respective lives. If you
mean creating a place where children can be baptized and nurtured and where
we can care for those who are in need and bury those whom we have loved and
lost a while, if you mean community in that sense, then no, I haven't worked
myself out of a job at all."
The sociologist Peter Berger who has a great deal of interest in social
organization and is a committed Christian, as well, has written about the nature
of the church as institution, and he speaks of the weak church and the strong
church, and he questions whether a church, a community, based like ours is
strong enough foundation to build upon. In a very interesting discussion he
suggests that, quoting from the book Why Conservative Churches Are Growing
by Dean Kelly, Kelly was right in the sense that those churches that demand
adherence to absolute truths, those churches that demand a very strict
discipline, those churches that seek to be zealous in their evangelism and their
missionary endeavor, those churches grow. But, I want you to know that what
we have become is a very self-conscious endeavor, for that book by Kelly was
written in 1972 and I got hold of it and I brought that book into the pulpit
around that time and said if this guy is right, we are doomed because we are
doing everything wrong. Rather than the claim of absolute truth, rather than
trying to harness you and to proscribe your behavior, rather than putting all of
that heavy, traditional obligation upon you, we were setting people free and

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throwing off the shackles. I said if Kelly's right, we cannot possibly live because
we are not building on that which has traditionally been a strong foundation for
an institution. And Kelly was right in the sense that there will always be those
who want dogmatism, who want absolutism, who want authoritarianism. It is
easier, it is simpler, you don't have to think about it, you can go and be a sheep.
There are always going to be those whose emotional needs demand that kind of
structure.
But, I was convinced then and I am convinced now that there will always be a
minority of people for whom that won't work. While Kelly was right in the sense
that those kinds of churches have continued to prosper, he was not right in the
fact that those who did not go that way simply had people drop off, so that, as
Bishop Spong says, there are millions and millions of people out there who are
believers in exile. They have given up on the institution. They cannot go that
route; they won't go that route, and yet they still have the same spiritual need,
the same quest, the same questioning.
I would suggest to you that it has been the unique nature of this community that
we have been not for the majority and not for the masses, but for a phrase I have
used here for years, simply for a narrow niche, that narrow niche of people who
refuse to give up on living before the face of God and opening their lives before
the mystery of being, but, who need to think about it, who need to probe it, who
need to have an authentic grasp of what it is they are doing, an awareness of
why. That which has brought us together in the beginning was that thoughtful
questioning, that intellectual inquiry that was wedded to a passionate offer of
grace that issued in a compassionate community
Jack Miles, a very interesting and provocative writer who has written God, a
Biography, and a book on Christ, talked in a New York Times magazine some
years ago of that resurgence of religion and he talked about the fact that that
God question does not go away. But, then he said something very interesting
that caught my eye. He said, "And there are very few that have the patience or
the preparation to probe theologically to find the viability of an honest religious
life today. But their importance is disproportionate to their number."
I said, "Ah, yes, just a few who will continue to think and continue to trust and
continue to love in order to make the viability of the practice of religion honest
and authentic with a mind that is critically aware but with a heart that longs for
God." I believe with all my heart that the heart cannot long dwell where the
mind cannot follow.
And so, we have to attend to some things this morning, but that is minimal.
What has called us together and what creates a community, that is all-

© Grand Valley State University

�Institution and Community

Richard A. Rhem

Page6	&#13;  

important. It is that of which we must be aware. It is that to which we must
continue to attend. It is that that is our strength.
Peter Berger acknowledged the fact that those who are a part of a community
like this recognize that they have chosen to be there. You don't have to be there.
And you won't be damned if you leave. Those who are a part of a community like
this are aware of the fact that they are part of a voluntary association, and if you
voluntarily come, you may voluntarily leave, and God bless. But, in the
meantime, that which binds us together is that passionate quest for the eternal
God, that mystery that embraces our lives finally it is community.
Paul got all choked up about it at the church at Ephesus. He said "My prayer for
you is that you be rooted and grounded in love, and you will come to know the
height and depth and length and breadth of the love of God in Christ Jesus,"
because community is about love. We don't turn off our minds. We ask every
question. We probe the edges. But, we know finally it is in that gracious
relationship of inclusivity that embraces all where we live together in love and
we know that that is the environment, that is the ambience of grace which
enables us to pursue together and individually that quest which is endemic to
being human. Paul says that you would know that love, and then he is lost in
wonder, love and praise as he breaks out in doxology, "To the one who is able to
do far beyond anything we have yet imagined or ever dreamed o£ to God be the
glory in the church in Christ Jesus."
Paul just soared as he thought about it, and so do I. I believe so deeply in what
we are. I believe so deeply in the heart of this community. I look at this family; I
have been with them, baptized their children, married their children, buried
their loved ones over so many years. Where would you go if you didn't have a
loving community in which to celebrate those holy moments of life?
I sat with Barbara and Norman on Wednesday as Norman Timmer came alive
telling me a story, saying, "You changed my life." I said, "Norm, I didn't change
your life. I was just the voice that articulated what you deeply believed." Barbara
told me that when I left, he relaxed and the head nurse came in and noticed the
change, and he died.
And so, I come today and I hear Molly sing, "Whatever your situation, I will be
your home, and when I move my hand, I will bring you home," and I cried,
because that is what it is all about.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>In a World in Peril
From the series: Religion and the Human Story
Isaiah	&#13;  43:1-­‐3;	&#13;  Matthew	&#13;  14:22-­‐32
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
February	&#13;  9,	&#13;  2003	&#13;  

Transcription of the spoken sermon
It is very good to be back here in this place with you. While the time away is
important and was wonderful, it is always good to come back home. I received
some comments as I do annually about coming back after the winter vacation
where I do serious reading and a lot of thinking and reflection. The expectation is
for all of that to result in some stimulating sermons and that puts tremendous
pressures on one. I know that I cannot live up to that expectation.
I was raised and nurtured in a tradition where the sermon is the word of God.
That comes from John Calvin, and Karl Barth made it explicit. The center of it all
is the word made flesh, of course, Jesus Christ, and the word written witnesses to
Christ, and from the text, the spoken sermon is every bit as much the word of
God in the tradition from which I stem. It pains me a bit at this point to have to
admit that I think that is presumptuous. Maybe it is the accumulated years.
Maybe it is a weakening of some facilities, I don't know. But, I recognize that this
moment is a sacred trust and that it is also a human impossibility, if I am, indeed,
to speak the word of God.
I cannot live up to that expectation. And I am acutely aware of the expectations
that drive you out of bed on a cold Sunday morning and get you here to this place.
But, if I cannot live up to that expectation, at least there is this that I can do and
that is simply take this familiar stool and sit in your midst and invite you to think
with me. That is an interactive experience, really. It is a two-way street. I hope
just the fact that I am here on this stool speaks volumes, and your presence in the
pew speaks volumes to me. And so, we launch out once again together in
thoughtful conversation before the face of God.
As I thought about these pre-Lenten weeks, I determined that we would think
together about religion and the human story. We have thought a lot about
religion here for some time. I suppose that is because I select the themes and that
has been very much on my mind. I think about it all the time consciously or
unconsciously, and all the time I am gone, I think about this appointment, this
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moment. The thing that seems imperative to me is that we gain an increasing
understanding of religion, the phenomenon of religion, the religious experience,
our faith and our observance, our practice of religion, because it is such a potent
power in life. I have increasingly over the years recognized its power. But, more
recently recognized not only its power for good, but its power for evil. It is a
universal human phenomenon. That is understandable, because we are of all
creatures those who are aware, are conscious. We can reflect upon ourselves. We
are the only animals that know that we will die and we know that those whom we
love will die, and we wonder why and we have the gift of consciousness that
enables us to reflect back upon ourselves and to ask, "What is this human
experience? What does it all mean? From whence has it all issued, and what will
be the issue of it all?" Those are fundamental human questions, if one lives at all
thoughtfully, and hardly anyone escapes being called up short now and again to
say what is it all about. The phenomenon of religion is this universal human
experience of wonder and of sacred worship and ritual and prayer and of
observance in one way or another, and so, caught up in that, its nature and the
human story. That is what I would invite you to reflect with me about a bit today
and in the subsequent weeks.

I crossed a Rubicon not so many years ago. I have crossed a number of Rubicons,
but one of the most significant Rubicons that I crossed was to come to
understand religion as a human construct. That was big for me. That religion, my
religion particularly, didn't fall out of heaven ready-made, that it was not the
consequence of some supernatural revelation that put it all in order, but rather,
that my religion and all religions were this universal human quest for meaning,
for understanding, this universal groping after that mystery which is at the heart
of everything, this yearning for some sense of that abyss of being that fountains
forth and has been concretized in this amazing cosmic journey. When I came to
see that my religion was not the only one, but was one among many, that we are
asking the same questions, looking for the same comfort and security and
understanding, that was a marvelously liberating moment for me.
Don't you remember just a few short years ago when we were called into question
for taking that stand publically? It seemed like it was a radical position at that
time and now it seems like everyone believes it. Isn't it interesting that after the
tragedy of the Columbia that one of the most sensitive follow- ups is the discovery
and the handling of the human remains, because on this particular space shuttle
there were Christians, Protestant and Catholic, there was a Jewish man, there
was a Hindu woman, and perhaps you have read how the various religions have
responded as to how to handle human remains and the respective rituals of
death. Because we are in this together, really. We are trying to understand the
meaning of our life and the meaning of death and then what? Is that all there is,
and how do we respect and reverence human life? So, to come to a point of being
able to look at religion somewhat objectively has for me been one of the most
liberating and illuminating aspects of my whole ministry, not having to be
defensive, not having to prove anyone wrong or to prove myself right.

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Someone clipped an interview out of the New York Times for me. It came to me
all the way from Texas, an interview with David Sloane Wilson, a biologist who
has written a book, Darwin's Cathedral: Evolution. Religion and the Nature of
Society. The little note said, "I thought you'd be interested in this," and indeed I
am. Wilson writing as a biologist is putting the evolutionary, empirical method to
an analysis of religion. He was asked at the end of the interview: "Do you believe
in God?"
He said, "I'm a communitarian. No, I suppose I'm an atheist, but I'm a nice
atheist."
Wilson suggests that religion began very early in the history of what could be
called human because religion enabled the clan or the tribe to become cohesive
and to cooperate together and that was a plus, that was of value for their
continuing existence and self-propagation.
The interviewer said, "Well, then, all of the trouble of religion and all of the
divisiveness and the hatred in religion as we see it today, that is an aberration
then, that is just a blip on the radar screen," and Wilson said, "Oh, no. Because
religion that made the 'in' group cohesive also had a tendency to demonize the
other and, therefore, religion has not only had that value of bringing people
together, but it has also a shadow side where it has built barriers between people
and even been a source of violence in the world, which in our world today
certainly we understand."

So, religion is so terribly important and I think it is important for us to think
about our own religious commitment, our own religious faith, our own religious
practice as we try to find orientation in this contemporary scene of which we are a
part. So, I invite you to think with me about religion and the human story, and
today, religion and the human story in a world in peril. That is an
understatement - a world in peril, where there is threat and fear on every side.
Last Thursday evening the evening news was a 30-minute segment. There were
five minutes of news and 25 minutes of commercials, I think, but in that segment
there was the iteration of all of the threats and the trouble in the world. I think
that was the point at which the terror alert had been heightened and the color
changed, notched up. There was the Iraqi situation, and talk of biological warfare
and chemical warfare and nuclear warfare, and there were pictures of police and
military people with machine guns outside of national monuments, and they were
putting barriers around monuments and speaking about the threat to places
where people gather in hotels and hospitals, and so forth. At the end of that news
segment, I was aware of the fact that I had a moment of awareness, and I was
afraid, and I thought to myself, "Dear God, there is something not good about
this."
I felt fear and I don't like to feel fear, and I began to think about what was going
on, and I recognized that we are in a period of time, or we are in a situation where

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we are so bombarded and pummeled with all of the news of the world that we
have no ability at all to have a sense of perspective, that we are constantly
brought up to an intensity which disallows us to keep our feet on the ground. As I
experienced that, I thought to myself we have to deal with that. We have to think
together about what all of that is doing to us. As I thought about this moment, I
thought about the religious community generally, and I realized that there is the
road most taken and that is for the religious community to affirm old cliches and
to let these cliches trip off our tongues, thereby reassuring ourselves that God is
in heaven and all is right with the world, finally.

A week ago Saturday in the Grand Rapids Press there was a large feature in the
Religion section on a contemporary megachurch that is growing by leaps and
bounds in Grandville. It is called Mars Hill, and they have 9,000 to 10,000
people on Sunday morning. They were only founded in 1999, about 800 people
coming out of Calvary undenominational church with their blessing and financial
support. They have this outstanding young preacher who is a great communicator
who came into ministry through a rock band and who is able, not only now with
his preaching, but also with a very professional-sounding rock band to really
make that place rock. This tremendous growth and dynamism of the Mars Hill
Church is in itself a phenomenon which many people are talking about. In the
news article there are a couple of paragraphs of analysis. I mention all of this
because if we are going to use our religion as a resource in such a time as this,
there are various ways to do that, and I am using this as an example of the way
most religious communities will respond to it in a rather traditional fashion.
In the article, it said that Mars Hill is among a recent breed of evangelical
churches serving younger people in post-modern America. Having grown up in
an age of relativism, shaken by the trauma of terrorism, many younger Christians
are looking for authenticity, community and spiritual discipline. And how could
they look for anything better than that? But, I continued to read, because I knew
there was another dimension that had to come out, and I read on: "They are eager
to commit to Christian absolutes."
Robert Weber who is an expert on some of these things and has a new book out
about the evangelical church, says that in a few years, churches like this will burst
forth with a new visibility in leadership that will mark the 21st century with a new
kind of evangelical, missional church. I mention this again because I want to say
that is one possible road, and that works. At times like these, there will be many
people who will be fleeing to religion and will be seeking that comfort and
assurance and some antidote against the fear that is so easy to be overwhelmed
with in our day. I mention the Mars Hill phenomenon not at all to be critical, and
certainly not to be envious. I hope God doesn't bless us that much. I'm too old for
that. But, I mention it because of that yearning for absolutes.
At the end of April, we have Charles Kimball coming from Wake Forest
University. He has written a book that is much spoken of these days, When

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Religion Becomes Evil. Charles Kimball gives us five warning signs of when a
religion may be getting into trouble, and the first warning sign is absolute truth
claims. That is the road most traveled by the religious community in response to
a world in peril. I cannot take that road. I cannot lead you that way, because I
believe it is the very nature of our historical existence, it is the very nature of
being human that those absolutes are denied us. We are a part of a cosmic drama,
an unfolding drama that reaches back into time that cannot even be conceived,
and is continuing to unfold and develop in ways of which we have not yet
dreamed. In such a situation, the only religious resource that I can offer you is a
reasoned and reflective understanding of what is going on in the world.
I would not deny anyone the emotional high or the emotional support of what a
Mars Hill can offer. But, it is my deep conviction that that is religion as escape
rather than religion as solution. And if religion is to be a solution, then I think we
have to think very carefully together to understand our time and to understand
the resource that our religion provides for us.
Let me suggest two things. Let me suggest, first of all, that we need perspective.
As I said a moment ago, the media drowns us. The media overwhelms us, and
because the media is a corporate venture, because they need advertising dollars,
they need audience, and to get audience, they have to be the first there. They have
to scoop, they have to have the latest analysis, they have to have the most
insightful talking heads, and there is this constant drone, this constant chatter
asking experts to speculate about that which cannot possibly be spoken of
reasonably and responsibly. The moment after the tragedy, we want to know all
about it and we are exposed to that, we are overwhelmed with that, and I think it
is important for us not to let happen to us what happened to me on Thursday
evening, where a 30-minute evening news gripped me with fear. I don't mean for
us to hide our head in the sand. I don't mean for us to be uninformed, but we
have to know that the way we get our information today is like this, it is the blitz
of the media. There is not time for reading, for reflection, for thoughtful
contemplation. We need to step back. We need to take some time. We have to
shut the tube off and go for a walk.
And then, again in terms of perspective, we have to ask ourselves, "Why did 9/11
so disturb us?" Was it not really because we have lived so long in the illusion that
we are impregnable? Scott Peck begins his book, The Road Less Traveled, with
the words "Life is difficult," and I would say that life is perilous and life has
always been perilous. I'm so old, I remember when we were building bomb
shelters and filling them with jars of water and non-perishables. Life is
dangerous. Human existence is perilous. That is not to say that there are not
some new twists and it is not to say that the hatred and the violence today has not
greater potential for disaster because of the means that are at hand. But, I think
one needs a bit of perspective, to recognize that to be human is to be constantly at
peril. And in terms of perspective, I would suggest that we keep in focus the
miracle, and the wonder and the glory and the joy of life.

© Grand Valley State University

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Last Friday evening when I returned home there was that gap between the clouds
and the lake, the sun threatening to come through, and it came through in all of
the golden radiance that illumined the landscape, illumined the icebergs, and
then slipped into the sea and sent its glorious gold up into the clouds. At such
times, one knows that one is a part of something that is so much bigger than any
terrorist threat. Then, Nancy and I made our way to Old Boys Brewery for one of
Bob Kleinheksel's gatherings, and there we gathered with Christ Community
types from 80 to 8, and we ate and we drank and our Robin sang like a bird, and I
looked over that crowd and I said, "This is my people. Yes! Yes! This is my
people." I almost think a Friday night in the brewery and a Sunday morning in
the sanctuary would be enough. And then yesterday I saw a beautiful red cardinal
on an evergreen branch tufted with snow, and I knew there was something,
something operative which transcends all of those things that threaten us. A bit of
perspective.
Then, too, one needs a sense of presence. Isaiah 43, "When you go through the
flood, you'll not be overwhelmed. When you go through the fire, you will not be
burned." A beautiful image. Through, not around, not over, not spared the fire,
not spared the flood, but you will go through.
Another image - Jesus walking on the water to the disciples whose little boat is
tossed in the storm. Peter impetuously plunging into the sea in faith, only to sink
in doubt, then to find the extended hand of his Lord. Images. Metaphors.
Metaphors and images that come out of an ancient time when God was in heaven
and in control, when God intervened here and again and rescued here and there.
We know it doesn't work that way. God does not keep towers from tumbling nor
space ships from disintegrating. And yet, those old images point us to that which
is ultimate and infinite which continues to come to expression, and here we are,
human beings who are the emergence of that process, who have learned that love
is stronger than hate, who have learned the possibility of deep joy, who have
experienced the wonder of grace, who know the possibility of forgiveness, and
who find in community that, when we are together, God is in the midst, and when
we have each other, it is enough. And so, dear friends, in light of it all, in a world
in peril, I choose to trust and not be afraid.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>When the Radiance Breaks Through
The Feast of Epiphany
Text: Isaiah 60:1-7, Matthew 2:1-12
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
January 5, 2003
Transcription of the spoken sermon
This is the Sunday we celebrate Epiphany, the manifestation and revelation of the
eternal God, the Creator Spirit, as that revelation was embodied in the whole
Gospel story. On the Festival of Epiphany, we celebrate the light of Jesus that has
come into the world. The symbols are obvious in the Magi coming from the East
representing the flowing of the nations to the light that was Israel’s. There was in
the Prophet’s imagination this dream of the nations and the kings of the earth
coming to the light that was written about in the Torah, the Jewish scriptures.
What a presumptuous dream, really. This little tribal people who were convinced
that the eternal God, the Creator, had dawned upon them and had given them the
light of life. They had the chutzpah to believe that the whole world would flow to
be instructed in Torah as the exaltation of Mt. Zion is a theme in the Hebrew
scriptures. Of course, presumptuous though it was, it was a marvelous dream,
because if you go on a little further in the writing of this particular prophet, you
would have that magnificent vision of shalom - a place where people would plant
gardens and eat the produce thereof; they would build houses and dwell in them;
where the lion and the lamb would lie down together and where no one would
hurt or destroy in all God’s holy mountain. So, although it was a presumptuous,
impossible dream that was dreamed in this small corner of the earth by this
relatively insignificant little people, nonetheless it was a big dream, and it was a
proper dream. It was a dream that arises from the deep intuition of the human
heart that the world could be other than it is. The world wouldn’t have to go on
with war and violence and exploitation and domination. If only the light of God
would break through, radiance across the board, there could be a human family, a
humane family. Things really could be other than they are. And again, there was
that dream in Israel’s prophet that believed that it would be.
The realization of that dream of the prophet never amounted to anything, for the
returned community to Jerusalem was a community marked by poverty and
dissension and so never really amounted to much of anything. The whole period
between Israel’s return from exile and the birth of Christ is a period in which
Israel was under domination. There was a period of independence that again lost
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its footing. So, what hope was there for that little people? For all of the
magnificence of the dream?
But, then, of course, the event of Jesus happened and the whole erupted around
him, including what he embodied, what he spoke, and the community that
developed around him. When that community began to tell the story, Matthew,
for one, told the story in terms of that ancient dream. Now that ancient dream
would come to pass and would be realized through the birth of this child. And so
the Magi come from the East following the star and bringing their gifts, and they
worshiped this one. Matthew says that is the way, that is the way of the future,
and his gospel ends with this same one Jesus saying to his disciples, “Go into all
the world and teach the gospel to all nations,” because the vision was of the global
conquest of this story born in Israel, born of Israel, embodied in Jesus and
continuing through the institution of the Christian church. The light has come
and now we simply wait for the realization of that promise that all nations will
finally flow to that light and bring obeisance to that king of kings.
So, that is the story. It is our story. But, there are other stories, because what has
been true from the beginning of our time is that we stand and we wonder before
the whole mystery of our existence. We wonder before the mystery of reality, for
as human beings we are lifted briefly on the stage of history’s drama. We are
compelled to be actors in that drama. As actors in that drama, fully submerged in
the stream of history itself, we have no knowledge of its beginning nor of its issue.
Here we are actors on the stage of history with our beginning and our ending
shrouded in mystery. And so, of course, people have wondered where did it all
stem from, where will it all issue, and what does it all mean in the meantime. We
are creatures who have come in the evolutionary process to the point at which we
have become aware. It is a relatively recent experience of the human being to
have some sense of that distant past and to wonder about where it will all go. The
religions of the world are simply the human being standing before all that,
standing in wonder, standing in awe, yearning for some clue as to what it all
means and longing for some comfort and some security in the midst of the peril
of it all. That is really the human situation.
So, religion has been universal. All peoples have had that experience of
wondering, of longing and yearning, of questing, and the Magi are simply
symbolic of that hunger of the human heart. That is our human condition.
Obviously, if that is our condition, we need some revelation and in the ancient
stories, in the ancient texts, there were revelations, and I would do that in
quotation marks. They were the intuitions or the insights or the understanding of
prophets and poets of the past in various contexts and different places among
different people who had some sense and who had the story that seemed to
resonate in the human breast. It seemed to make some sense. It gave some merit,
some comfort, some security. And so, we are a people in the midst of the drama
of history with each end shrouded in mystery who are looking for a clue as to

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what it is all about, and the interesting thing is that it would seem as though
revelation ceased a couple thousand years ago.
And yet, what we have come to learn just in the last 300 years is more amazing
and more significant than anything in an ancient text, for we have become
creatures of self-consciousness and awareness, and now with our scientific
knowledge, we have some sense of how the process began, of the development of
the process. As I have been trying to say during this Christmas season, if we really
understand the depths of incarnation and what we see there, the deep intuition
there is that creative spirit, that eternal creative spirit or energy has become
incarnate in us, the incarnation in Jesus, not one once for all, but one significant
or symbolic of all, and so that the process of which we are now becoming aware
and which we have vast knowledge, although we still know so little, nonetheless,
actors on the stage as we are, we have some knowledge and the knowledge that
we have come to if we could understand it is that we are not only the actors, we
are writing the script. That is scary, and that is a radical thing for me to say. But,
what I am saying on this Epiphany Sunday is that the light that has shined, the
radiance that has broken through, the knowledge that we have has put us in the
position of being responsible now for how the play ends. Or, at least how the play
continues.
It is so wonderful to celebrate these beautiful religious festivals, the wonder and
the glory that is Christmas, and even this morning the procession of the kings
again and singing “We Three Kings of Orient Are,” that never seems to get over,
and it touches us deeply. It touches those deep emotional chords, and it is good.
But, you know friends, I am so struck by this more and more and more, that we
celebrate that delightful story as the thing that God has done and now we are
waiting for God to do the next thing, and we’re God. God is in us. And the next act
will be written by us, for religion can become so familiar that it doesn’t break
through to us anymore. But, as a matter of fact, we have just celebrated
Christmas again and our world is in crisis, and I don’t think there is going to be a
revelation in Washington or in Baghdad or in North Korea. But, you know what?
We don’t need further revelation.
What we really need is a transformation of consciousness on the basis of the
revelation we have, because we know that the world could be different than it is.
When the third Isaiah dreamed it in little Israel, it was a tribal people and a little
corner of real estate, a magnificent dream, an impossible dream, a preposterous
dream. I can understand that the prophet had to believe that it would be God that
would bring it to pass. But, God is not going to bring it to pass. If we could dream
the dream in this nation and this year of our Lord 2003, we could bring it to pass.
We could figure it out.
Now, you can say, for example the Ten Commandments, “Thus saith the Lord .”
That is supposed to give weight to those commandments, but as a matter of fact,
you could sit down as human beings at this point and think about what is it going

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to take to have a civil, decent, moral society? You could come up with ten rules or
a dozen. You don’t really need the thunder of heaven at this point. We are aware
enough, we know enough, we have at our fingertips resources, technology. We
don’t need thunder from heaven. We don’t need a bright star. We could create an
alternative world if we had a mind and a will to, couldn’t we?
I don’t think that transformation of consciousness is going to come from our
political system. I don’t think it is going to come from our economic system. I
don’t think it is going to come from the church. We are all implicated in this. We
get the politics we deserve and presently it is obvious our politics are bought and
paid for, and we have a consumer society that is being consumed with more
compulsion to consumption. And so, there are reasoned arguments raised against
every prophetic cry of warning about the fact that we cannot just go on this way
with such a lopsided balance of power against the masses. We can’t go on this
way with the use of resources in a wasteful fashion without concern for the future
of the planet. We can’t go on this way trying to batten the hatches on terrorism
and violence. We can’t go on that way. And yet, no one is going to tell us that,
whether in state or church because life gets institutionalized and there is so much
vested interest and nobody tells the truth.
There are some contemporary voices. We got a Christmas card from Peter and
Helen Hart. Peter did a little re-imagining of John Lennon’s “Imagine.” I was not
familiar with John Lennon’s lyrics, I was struck by them. (I never was a Beatle
fan; I never had a youth; I never had an adolescence; I studied the Bible. I didn’t
even know there were Beatles) Just listen to John Lennon:
Imagine there’s no heaven, it’s easy if you try.
No hell below us, above us only sky.
Imagine all the people living for today.
I guess he wants to imagine no heaven because he wants to get rid of that
supernatural super-cop, and no hell because he wants to get rid of that
manipulative instrument by which the church has controlled people. And then he
says,
Imagine there’s no countries; it isn’t hard to do,
nothing to kill a guy for, no religion, too.
Imagine all the people living life in peace.
If there were no countries, there’d be no nationalism. If there was no nationalism,
there wouldn’t be the rhetoric that would fire up people and drive them into war.
If there weren’t any countries, he’s saying, then nothing to kill or die for, and no
religion too because he was insightful enough to know that religion has been one
of the fomenters of violence through our history.
Imagine no possessions. I wonder if you can.
No need for greed or hunger, a brotherhood of man.

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Imagine all the people sharing all the world.
You may say I’m a dreamer, but I’m not the only one.
I hope some day you’ll join us and the world will be as one.
With a little imagination, Peter reversed John Lennon but really said the same
thing in terms of our story, if we believed it.
Imagine there’s a heaven, it’s easy if you try.
When love is all around us and beauty fills the sky.
Imagine all the people living for today.
Imagine all the countries, it isn’t hard to do,
The rule of law to guide us and religion, too.
Imagine all the people living life in peace.
Imagine our possessions. I wonder if you can.
As gifts for need and hunger according to God’s plan.
Imagine all the people sharing all the world.
Our hope is not just dreaming, for once was born a son
who lived that we might follow him and the world would be as one.
I suspect that one day there will be an eruption on the part of the people who are
going to say to presidents and popes and cardinals and preachers and politicians,
“Get out of the way, because you are so tied in to systems and structures that still
have archaic solutions and primitive impulses that we the people don’t have time
for you anymore, for we the people know it could be different than it is.” And I
suspect it’s going to be a John Lennon, some poet somewhere, artist, someone of
the people who is going to say the word to which we are all going to say, “Yes,”
and the radiance will break through. The world will be marked by compassion
and kindness and grace and love and justice and fairness.
Someone said if we were going to create a world and none of us knew how we
were going to end up, a world now marked by haves and have-nots, what if we
were all together in a pot and we didn’t know we were going to end up at the top
or the bottom or where we might end up. What if we had to start from scratch
and we all had to sit down and create a world? If we had to design a world, how
would we design the world? Wouldn’t we design the world where everybody
would have a fair shake? Wouldn’t we design a world where there was humane
existence everywhere? Wouldn’t we design a world where there was no poverty or
hunger or disease? Wouldn’t we design a world that is so different than the world
we’re now dominating? Sure we would. We know better. We know enough to
write the script and create a world that hasn’t yet been dreamed of.
Dream about it. You can do it if you dare.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>The Deeper Truth of Incarnation
Text: I John 1: 1-4, 4: 7-8; John 1: 1-5, 14-18
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
December 22, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
The title of the sermon this morning invites you to think with me about
incarnation and the deeper understanding of it. It is not because I have
discovered something about incarnation that is brand new. It is rather that I am
recognizing more and more that the old familiar truth of incarnation has become
so familiar to us that we fail to see, to understand its radicality and the
revolutionary nature of the claim of incarnation. The eternal Word: “In the
beginning was the Word,” John begins the gospel. Someone has translated that,
“In the beginning was the Intention,” and I like that. The Divine Intention. There
was something in the beginning, some intentionality in this whole creative
process. So, in the beginning was the Divine Intention.
In the fourteenth verse that Divine Intention becomes flesh, human nature. The
radicality of that claim is amazing. Luke tells us the story in a beautiful fashion,
describing the birth of the child, the mother, the angels, the shepherds and all.
But John had a philosophical bent of mind, and he sets this event in a vast cosmic
context, reflecting on it philosophically or theologically. (You will be well advised
to stick with the storytellers. Theologians are boring, but such is my lot.) So, it is
John this morning. “The Word became flesh.” That is a radical claim.
All day long yesterday the house was filled with a marvelous aroma, and at
suppertime Nancy served us bowls of chili con carne. We often speak about chili,
but it is really chili con carne, and con carne comes from the Latin. Con is the
preposition with, and carne is meat. We are, those of us who haven’t cleaned up
our act and become vegetarians, carnivores, meat eaters, carnivorous. I love it.
And I look like it. Carnival. You have never identified that word with chili con
carne, but as a matter of fact, carnival is the carni-valle, farewell to red meat,
farewell to meat. Carnival time is a time to let out all of the stops and get all that
juice out of you because you are about to enter into a fast where you are going to
be solemn and serious. And so Mardi Gras, a carnival, is a farewell to the flesh.
The incarnation means that what we really have to deal with is God con carne.
It’s a little crass, but you should never forget it. Christmas is God con carne.
Christmas is God with flesh on, the central truth expressed so powerfully in
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John’s gospel and reiterated in the letters of John which emanated from that
Johannine circle. How could you make it any more concrete than those opening
sentences of that first letter? “We declare to you what was from the beginning,
what we have heard, what we have seen from our eyes, what we have looked at
and touched with our hands of the word of life.” John was intent on expressing
the fact that God has come to expression in human nature, in humanity, that the
human is the embodiment of God, the enfleshment of God.
From time immemorial we have wanted some clue about God. Hasn’t there
always been that question in the depths of the human spirit—who is God? Where
is God? What is God? What is the ultimate? Why is there something rather than
nothing?
Certainly John knew that. In the fourteenth chapter we have that little
conversation between Jesus and Phillip. Jesus has been talking about going to the
father and Phillip says, “Well, Lord, just show us the father and we will be
satisfied.” Jesus says to him, “Phillip, have I been with you so long and you still
don’t get it? If you have seen me, you have seen the father.”
Phillip, don’t you get it? Here I am, God in your midst, the embodiment, the
enfleshment of God in your midst. Phillip, you want to see the father, you want to
understand the father, you want to
know the clue to the mystery of that which is ultimate? Touch me. Look in my
face, for I am the only God you will ever know, because the amazing claim of our
gospel is that the eternal intention has become enfleshed in a human being.
In the eighteenth verse we read, “No one has ever seen God.” Once again, there it
is. You see, no one has ever seen God. But the only son has made God known.
As I have said before, someone has translated that in a rather marvelous fashion.
The discipline we learn in seminary is the science of exegesis. You take a text and
break it apart and open it up and try to explain it. You interpret it. That is what I
am doing as we speak. Exegesis. It is an academic discipline which hopefully
would prepare the preacher for opening the text for the people. That eighteenth
verse—no one has seen God—has been translated by someone: The only son is the
exegesis of the father. That is wonderful. The son breaks open the mystery that is
God. So this is what Christmas is about. This is what the central act of Christmas
is about—the embodiment, the enfleshment of God in the human.
“Ah,” you say to me, “that is not a deeper understanding. That is the same old
thing we have always heard.” That’s true. But let me remind you of what I have
been circling around in these last weeks and last Advent season particularly. I
cannot believe that I have lived all my life, Advent after Advent, and not
recognized the contradiction—the conflict between the mirror of God in the
incarnation and the mirror of God in the second coming. In Advent we so easily
say that the one who came is coming again. And then it struck me that the image

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of God that we have revealed in the life of Jesus from the crib to the cross, that
life of obscurity and poverty, of humility, of grace, of compassion, the
vulnerability of the child, the vulnerability of the one who was crucified, is a
picture of God and we have claimed it. But how do we put it together with the
God revealed in that one who will come again? The one who came in poverty and
humility will come again in power and great glory? What is mirrored in the first
coming contrasts with the God mirrored in the second coming.
It seems that the one who came in poverty and humility came from another realm
into our realm, took temporary residence, took on flesh temporarily, and then left
again, having accomplished redemption in order that we might be delivered from
this realm into God’s realm. There are two realms, a dualism, and the God
revealed in that child, that God as vulnerable is still apparently above the fray and
still in control and still calling the shots. But the God revealed in the child, in the
vulnerability of the child, has given up on control. That God embodied in the
human is the God who creates us in freedom, beckoning us to love in turn. And
that is precisely the risk of love.
Love doesn’t have any guarantees. If you have a world where might makes right,
you can coerce and have your own way. If God runs the universe that way, then
God can have God’s way. But if God indeed emptied God’s self, and if the Infinite
has become concrete in the finite so that you can touch and handle a word made
flesh, then that kind of vulnerability brings no guarantee. Love can be defeated.
Love can be crucified. And the image of that God is quite other than the God who
will move from the wings into the main stage and call down the curtain on history
and execute judgment on the living and the dead. That God never gave up
control. That God in Jesus remained “God” very much.
I am suggesting to you that the deeper understanding of incarnation may be that
the God revealed in Bethlehem’s child is the real genius of the Christian
understanding, but that the Church couldn’t live very long with a vulnerable God.
What we want is a God who is strong and in control, the Lord God Almighty. Now
just think about this with me, because I am plowing some new ground here and I
am not at all sure. I am totally sure, however, that I do not have all the loose ends
gathered up. But I am attempting to find a new way to think and speak about God
as I see God revealed in Jesus and the incarnation and simply stop there, because
I think a major distortion has occurred in the history of the church and it began
very early. It began with that apocalyptic expectation in the immediate aftermath
of Jesus, that apocalyptic vision that expected the heavens to open and God to
come down and to wreak judgment on the world.
I am suggesting to you a deeper understanding of the incarnation in that the
original intention was to say, “O my god, God is like that!” I am suggesting that
the intention of the incarnation in the heart of the Christian proclamation was to
portray a God of vulnerability, because that God would create the likes of us in
freedom, beckoning us to love. It seems to me that the mistake the Church made

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was to say that what happened in Jesus happened once for all, one for all, when
as a matter of fact, the initial encounter with him by those who touched him, who
looked upon him, who listened to him was to say, “My God!” and to realize that
God was in the human. We are in this cosmic process of billions of years, the Big
Bang, stars exploding, elements cooling, and planets forming in a most amazing
fashion beyond our ability to fathom. It seems to me that the deeper
understanding of the incarnation is that after billions and billions and billions of
years, perhaps about three million years ago, life happened. Then maybe a
million years ago something similar to human life began to form, and eventually
it comes to the likes of us on the edge of the third millennium where we can sit in
an assembly like this and think about billions of years and cosmic reality and star
explosions.
Do you realize the amazing understanding that is ours, the privilege that is ours?
We have come to a point where we are aware of that whole thing, aware of that
whole process, learning more about it all the time, yet knowing very little about
its deep mysteries except that we are the product of the process that has been
underway. As we think about it, we human beings become the consciousness of
the cosmos, we human beings become the awareness. The cosmos becomes aware
in us. We human beings have a voice to praise and stand in wonder at the
cosmos.
That is an amazing thing! And it seems to me the deeper understanding of the
incarnation would be that the process goes along for billions of years and one day
some creature wakes up and becomes aware to the point that we say, “There is a
human being.” And the awareness continues to grow. The understanding of the
incarnation I am suggesting claims that the Infinite, that Creative Spirit, however
you wish to speak of the Ultimate Mystery, becomes concrete in the finitude of
the likes of us. Finitude, matter which has spirit, matter which thinks and knows
and understands and becomes aware—that is the miracle of Christmas, the
coming into flesh of God. That is the concretization of the Creative Spirit in a
form that you can begin to grasp.
The Church wanted to say all of that about Jesus, but only Jesus. And then the
rest of us poor middling human beings trudge through this vale of tears waiting
to be redeemed in order that we might be exited to another realm. Do you see the
dualism of that traditional conception? God sends the Son, the Son takes up
temporary residence in our flesh, and after the incarnation there is an exincarnation. The purpose of the incarnation was not to enable us to be the bearers
of divinity, but rather to deliver us from our fallen estate. But we have missed the
glory of it! We have missed the wonder of it. We sit around here waiting. We wait
for the next act of God. We wait for the clouds to open and for God to speak in
dramatic fashion and to right the wrongs and bring history to consummation. But
that is not going to happen.

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God has acted. God has become human. The human is the bearer of God. The
incarnation is a reality, an ongoing reality. We are the extension of the
incarnation. We cry out, “How long, O Lord, how long?” I suppose God would
resoundingly cry, “How long? How long, indeed! When will you get it? You are
it!”
I think the writer of that first letter had something like that in mind, for after the
opening paragraphs of chapter one saying God is tangible in the flesh, in the
fourth chapter he writes God is love. And he repeats that line from the gospel’s
first chapter: “No one has ever seen God.” But then he adds content to it. He says
that the one who dwells in love dwells in God and God dwells in that one. A few
lines later, the one who abides in love abides in God and God in that one.
In other words, humanity is the bearer of divinity. And it is the one who has
learned to love who is the one in whom that divinity dwells in full expression.
Well, I shouldn’t say “full expression.” Let’s say tentative expression, or
inadequate expression, perhaps flawed expression. But nonetheless, there was
something about Jesus, the flesh of Jesus, the person of Jesus which caused those
who saw him, who walked with him, who had an encounter with him to say, “My
God!”
And that wasn’t the end. It was only the beginning. It wasn’t once for all and at
one time and place, but true every place at all times. The whole process has been
tending toward this. The whole cosmic process has been issuing in spirit, spirit
marked by love, for God is love. The world lies in such darkness and there is such
grief and pain, it is only in the midst of that darkness when the human embraces
me that I can feel the embrace of God; when another looks into my eyes and says,
“I care, I love.” Then I look into the face of God.
All that sounds like naive preacher talk, the kind of silly sentimental stuff you
would expect at Christmas. Well, it’s your fault. You came to church at Christmas
time. Sometimes I question myself about harping on this all the time, because
someone might say to me, “Don’t you know there is a real world out there? Don’t
you know how dark it is? You are saying that the human animal is a God-bearer?
You are saying that the only God accessible, visible, tangible is the God enfleshed
in the human?”
And I have to say, “Yes.” Because I believe that Jesus Christ is the way and the
truth and the life and no one will ever experience the Ultimate Mystery except in
the way of Jesus, which is the way of love, of self-emptying love. The deeper truth
of the incarnation is the radicality of the divinity in humanity that is crying to
come to expression.
But we can’t live with that for very long. Then it’s in our hands, it is up to us.
Then we have to change the world. Once in a while I just smile at myself ranting
on like this in such naive fashion, except that the real naiveté is to think that the

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kingdom will come in any other way, that it will come through power or might or
glory, that it will come with the exercise of muscle, that we can establish once and
for all freedom and justice.
No. Fear controls and power coerces. Love transforms.
Once in a while I get a fax on Sunday night. This one said, “Dick, following is a bit
of verse that fits with your sermon this morning. I believe the original stimulus
was one of your Wednesday evening Advent messages a year ago. You will also
find a number of thoughts borrowed from your sermons.”
What if we loved one another?
What if we Christians, Muslims and Jews loved one another?
What if we Christians, Hindus and Buddhists loved one another?
What if we Christians, Confucians and agnostics loved one another?
What if we evangelicals, fundamentalists, and liberals loved one another?
What if God’s people of all faiths loved one another?
Would we miss the illusion of superiority?
Would we miss the exhilaration of judging others?
Would we miss the view from higher moral ground?
Would we miss the thrill of killing them with swords or words?
What if we white and black loved one another?
What if we black and yellow loved one another?
What if we yellow, red and brown loved one another?
What if we Europeans, Asians, Africans and Latinos loved one another?
What if God’s children of every color and nation loved one another?
Would we miss the illusion of superiority?
Would we miss the exhilaration of judging others?
Would we miss the view from the higher moral ground?
Would we miss the thrill of killing them with swords or words?
What if we old and young loved one another?
What if we single or married loved one another?
What if we without academic degrees loved one another?
What if we straight and gay loved one another?
What if we female and male loved one another?
What if we blue collar and white collar loved one another?
What if God’s daughters and sons of every label loved one another?
Would we miss the illusion of superiority?
Would we miss the exhilaration of judging others?
Would we miss the view from the higher moral ground?

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Would we miss the thrill of killing them with swords or words?
September 11th showed us what love’s absence can do. The days after have shown
us what happens when love is activated, superiority stifled by the quiet but
tireless power of humility, judgment overruled by the celebration of diversity that
enriches us. Higher ground was held only by those tired, dusty heroes who
emptied themselves in service, blood-red battlefields transformed into green
meadows of mercy and healing.
What if we loved one another? What if we started with simple respect? What if we
humans become what we are intended to be? Would God’s people of all faith
languages worship in unison? Would God’s children of every color compose one
picture? Would God’s daughters and sons of every label celebrate as siblings?
Would we then finally understand the meaning of incarnation? Of God with us?
Of God in us? Of human divinity?

© 2013 Kaufman Interfaith Institute and Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>The Icon of God from Cradle to Grave
Advent I
I Colossians 1:15-20 Luke 2:1-7, 23:32-38
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
December 1, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
What do you imagine God to be like? What is, in your estimation, the nature of
God? Or, if God language is uncomfortable, what do you think is the character or
the nature of ultimate reality? Or, what is at the center of the mystery of being?
Maybe there is nothing. Maybe all of this is just a chance occurrence. But, if there
is some center, and you could call it God or you could call it the Infinite Mystery,
or however you would think of that, what would its nature be? If you think about
God, maybe you think about the old language when we used to speak about the
attributes of God. Well, what would be the center, the central attribute of God?
Or, the mystery of existence? Or, the heart of reality?
You haven't thought about it recently, eh? It is not every day you get asked such a
profound question. But, it is an important question, a very significant question,
because there is a lot of truth in the claim that we become like the God that we
worship, that we reflect in our nature, our being, our actions, our behavior, our
attitude and our spirit, that we reflect what we consciously or unconsciously
sense is in the deep depths and center of things. And so, it is not just a trick
question and it is certainly not an intellectual exercise I invite you to, but rather,
really deep down, how do you conceive God? What is your God like? What is the
ultimate Ultimate at the heart of reality?
That is a fascinating question and an important question, and we enter the
Advent season today around the table of our Lord and we come to remember and
what do we remember? We remember Jesus, and we come to the table where the
bread is broken and the cup is poured out and, as some years ago Dominic
Crossan said so simply and yet so potently, where you have body and blood
separated, that points to a violent death. Body and blood are not separated when
you die in your bed. So, we come to remember Jesus, body broken, blood poured
out, Jesus, a violent death. We come to remember that Jesus died, and we say
Jesus died for us. In the traditional liturgy of the church down through the
centuries, whether Protestant or Catholic, that death has been understood as an
atoning death for the sin of the world. Jesus took upon himself our sin, clothed us
in his righteousness, therefore opening for us the possibility of forgiveness and
© Grand Valley State University

�Icon of God from Cradle to Grave

Richard A. Rhem

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peace with God. It is that move very early on, that understanding or
interpretation of the death of Jesus that has made the church into a salvation
cult. This is a place where you come to find salvation. This is a place where you
come to have the assurance of sins forgiven and the assurance of life eternal. The
church is the place of salvation. And to the extent that the church has become the
place of salvation, the church has missed what I would suggest was the heart and
center of the life of Jesus.
The New Testament speaks in several places of Jesus as the icon of God. I had
Don read the passage from Colossians rather than Hebrews because it uses the
Greek word ikon from which our word icon comes, which means image or
representation or picture or figure. When you see the icon, you see the
representation of that to which the icon points, and obviously, the claim is that to
look at Jesus is to see the nature of God. We could have used that passage of the
writer to the Hebrews, God who in sundry times and diverse places spoke to our
forebears by the prophets as in these last days spoken unto us by a son who is the
effulgence of God's glory and the expressed image of God. John in his Gospel
says in 14:9, "If you have seen me, you have seen the father." Paul in II
Corinthians in the 4th chapter, sixth verse, says that we see the light and the
knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. Jesus, the icon of God.
If we go to the Gospel of Luke, in fact, if we go to Matthew, Mark or Luke, one of
the first three Gospels, we will find this life set forth, this life portrayed. In Luke's
Gospel which is perhaps the most familiar and best loved, we have Jesus being
born in a cattle stall, in poverty and obscurity, and dying on a Roman cross in
ignominy and shame with grace on his lips. So, if Jesus is the icon of God, if Jesus
is the image of God, if Jesus is the reflection of God, if Jesus is the embodiment of
God, then this God pictured in the Gospel in Jesus' story is rather unGodlike,
right?
If you go to John's Gospel, there is a different nuance. Maybe it is more than a
nuance. This one comes from eternity assuming human flesh, carrying out the
divine mission, but even in those moments of crucifixion very much still in
control. But, not so the Jesus of the synoptic Gospels, Matthew, Mark and Luke.
There we have Jesus in the beautiful Christmas story and very much a product of
the social-historical moment in which he was born. He was born in the year in
which Caesar Augustus was reigning who could make a decree that would cause
peasant people to move cross-country, even a very pregnant woman on this
torturous journey, as the story tells it so movingly, coming to a place for which
there is no room for them, having to move into a cattle stall where a child is born,
a child who is born and adored by the off-scouring of society, the shepherds who
gather around in adoration. This one, born very much in his social- historical
context in poverty and obscurity and humility, and the life of Jesus portrayed in
that Gospel, as you go through it, is a life consistent with the humility, the
compassion, the care, the love, the grace, not a pussy-cat, but a love that has iron
in it, a love that is strong enough to confront the temple establishment or Pilate

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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in the moment of his trial, a love that is able - it's a strong love. This is no passive
observer of life. This is one who engages life with power and with strength but
always with grace and tenderness and humility. And then he dies as he dies on a
Roman cross, condemned through the collusion of the church and the state, with
grace on his lips. That is the icon of God. That is the representation of God in
human flesh, human experience.
But there is a tension in the New Testament because the passage that was read a
moment ago, the icon of God in I Colossians 1:15 goes on to speak about this one
as the firstborn of creation. This one is really something; this one is the agent of
creation; this one is in all things preeminent. In fact, in that same letter it says
that in him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell. I am beginning to feel
some tension here. The writer to the Hebrews says that this one who was the
expressed image of God after he had made atonement for our sins, sat down on
the throne and throughout the New Testament there is that movement toward
the exaltation of the one who was humiliated. We'll come back to that in a couple
of weeks. To be sure, Paul says in Philippians II that Jesus emptied himself. But,
because he did, he was given a name above every name that, at the name of Jesus,
every knee would bow.
So, we have this interesting thing going on in the New Testament. We have this
picture of this beautiful human being born in humility, killed in humiliation, and
the claim is that he is the icon of God from the cradle to the grave, or from the
crib to the cross. And yet, we don't stay there very long. Very soon we want to lift
him up. Very soon we want to speak about him as the agent of creation. Very soon
we want to speak about him as the eternal word, and very soon we want to talk
about him reigning at the right hand until he subdues all his enemies. A little
tension there. I wonder why. I suggest it is because the church, when it got some
power and credibility, didn't really want to stay with Jesus meek and mild. I
mean, after all, if I am going to bow down to this one, I'd like this one to be
worthy of my adoration.
Now, if you can play God for a day, if you could forget the Bible and the
catechisms and all of your preconceptions, if you could just start out now, but
basically being the human being you are, and you could create reality, shape it,
how would you shape it? If you were going to call all things into being, how would
you make it work? What would you like to be at the heart of it? I started out with
a question - What do you think is at the heart of it? Now is your chance. Not, is
that the way it is, but if you could do it, what would you put at the heart of
everything?
And then a second question: How would you make that happen? What would you
conceive of as the ideal, and how would you bring it about?
Let's just say you said I would create a world in which might made right. That's
possible. A world in which might made right. Well, then the second question is
not necessary because then I know how you would effect it; you would do it

© Grand Valley State University

�Icon of God from Cradle to Grave

Richard A. Rhem

Page 4

coercively. You could exercise your power. If might makes right, then it is
guaranteed. But, what if you were to conceive of a world whose heart and center
were love and grace? Then how would you effect that? Then how would you make
that happen?
If it is love and grace, there is no coercion. If there is no coercion, there are no
guarantees. And if there are no guarantees because there is no coercion, then love
can be defeated. It seems to me that is what happened between the cradle and the
grave. God embodied in the flesh of Jesus entered the world in humility, lived
with passion, love and grace, and died violently because that was the world's
response to that embodiment of God as love in our midst. I'm not surprised about
the tension in the New Testament because, as a matter of fact, who needs a God
like that?
If you travel Europe a bit and go to the cathedrals, and if you go particularly to
Italy to Ravenna, there are all these marvelous mosaics full of gold and I
remember particularly in Ravenna in the dome over the chancel there is the
Emperor Caesar, and over here another, and in the center up at the top there is
Jesus, and that the name for that particular icon represented in that mosaic is
Pantocreator. Pan is the prefix meaning all. This is the ruler over all. This is the
ruler over all worlds. This one set in gold mosaic has the emperors down here at a
decent level. This Jesus rules. This Jesus reigns. This Jesus will come again, by
God! This Jesus will come with power and flashing glory, and will be a total
contradiction of the icon of God that he was in the days of his flesh. Icon of God
from Crib to Cross, from Cradle to Grave, humility, grace, compassion,
tenderness, love. And then, because that is not the kind of world we really believe
in, we transformed him into quite another icon, an icon with which we can live
more comfortably, an icon who is the representative of a God, God Almighty, God
all-powerful, God in control, God in charge. The only problem with this is, as I
said at the beginning, we become like the God that we worship. And we, too,
would be in control and believe that might makes right if might is ours.
So, what kind of a world would you create?

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>The Holy Family – God’s Elect?
From the sermon series: Once Upon A Time…
Text: Genesis 27:1-4, 18-40; Romans 9:1-18
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
November 24, 2002
Transcription of the handwritten sermon text
Laying out sermon series or setting down themes and texts for a 2 or 3-month
period or for a season such as Advent or Lent is hard work. It is a creative process
that cannot be coerced. Sometimes a couple of days of rather intense struggle
leave me empty and, then again, a whole series may take shape in a moment after
such struggle. And sometimes I can move methodically through the subjects set
down and sometimes the series takes on a mind of its own and I find myself going
where, in the setting down of the series, I never dreamed I would go.
Such is the case with the present series of sermons from Genesis.
Last Sunday you applauded as I ended the sermon suggesting we may need a
moratorium from our respective ancient texts – the Jewish Scriptures, our Bible,
the Koran of Islam – because the texts are being used in too many instances as
justification for hatred, violence and war. Then I suggested we lay down our
respective texts and look each other in the eye, meet heart to heart as human
beings – Jew, Christian, Muslim, three peoples, three faith traditions, with one
common ancestor, Abraham.
Do you know the first time ever a sermon of mine received an ovation? It was the
last Sunday in October, 1992. I was asked to represent the Reformed Church at a
conference at Brandeis University – a conference on congregational participation
in Judaism, Roman Catholicism and Protestantism. All three were recognizing a
falling off of congregational membership and involvement and the conference
was called at Brandeis at the Jewish Center there to reflect on what was
happening and to show models of some successes in the respective faiths.
It was Reformation Sunday. I had been asked to preach at the opening session on
Sunday evening. On Sunday morning I concluded the sermon here by saying on
that Reformation Sunday we should all go to Geneva and then on to Rome to pick
up the Catholics, then to Constantinople to heal the breach between West and
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East. Then to Medina where Mohammed received his revelation and then all of us
together return to Jerusalem where we could be the one people of God.
You applauded. I was dumbstruck; it had never happened before. But I touched a
nerve – and something in you said, “Yes.”
That happened last week too – and the appeal was the same: moving beyond the
divisions that have proven so perilous and finding our common humanity before
the face of the Mystery toward which we all grope and yearn.
Nancy said, “Now I suppose you’ll never retire, after getting an ovation.” I said,
“Oh, yeah! How would you like to come back the next Sunday?”
I relate this because I became aware again of the intuitive sense of the people – in
this case, you – but I wonder if it is not true of a good many people in any given
congregation – the intuitive sense that religion should build community, should
bond and heal, and that religion is being misused, abused, twisted when it is the
stimulus to derision, hatred, violence and war.
And, as I said, sometimes a series takes on a life of its own and takes me where I
did not intend to go. But here I am seeing what I did not intend to deal with,
seeing what is not new to us but seeing it in a new and powerful way: seeing how
religion is tribal and leads to tribalism and thus potentially to alienation, hatred,
violence and war.
There would be no problem with tribal religion if it were recognized that that is
what we have and if we could seek the Face of God through our respective stories,
rituals and moral codes, but that has not been the case with the Abrahamic faith.
There is a universalizing tendency, which is understandable because we claim to
be speaking of God, the Creator, the ultimate, the One True God, and thus there
has been a tendency to absolutize our vision, our understanding.
This doesn’t seem to be a problem in the East, and Judaism considered itself a
light to the nations but without the need to proselytize. The universalizing
tendency in Christianity has led to the idea that we are to evangelize the world,
that the world will be saved through Jesus Christ alone and the rest are lost. This
has been the Christian mission. And Islam – sometimes it seems to claim
absolute status, sometimes not, in the course of its history.
In any case the danger comes from fundamentalism in each of the Abrahamic
faiths, and this mentality is the same, whether Jewish, Christian or Islam.
And to come back to my suggestion last week that we take another look at the
ancient texts – you understand I am not suggesting we forget our respective
founding stories, but I am suggesting that we hear them but not absolutize them
as if they were the Word of God, that we see them as human products containing

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Richard A. Rhem

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within themselves all the negative potential of human tribalism, of overagainstness of one group over another.
Let’s look at today’s lesson: Esau and Jacob. The story: Is this God’s idea? This is
a story written to explore, to justify the existence of the Jewish people. Reaching
back to Abraham, Jewish faith understands the Jewish people as God’s chosen,
the Elect of God – elected to be light to the nations, to embody the rule of God on
earth, to teach the nations Torah– God’s way of life.
In its positive statement this is a grand vision: not through conquest or
domination, not even by effecting conversion to Judaism, but by its very being
and by its Torah as a law or way of life, Israel would be the world’s teacher.
And its ancient past is some story: Sarah, Hagar, Isaac, Ishmael, bitterness,
heartbreak… amazing that their dysfunction and human misery should be
recorded as a peoples’ past. There is a self-critical awareness and honesty in the
Hebrew Scripture. The Hebrew prophets, too, criticize the nation.
Today: Esau and Jacob. The story: the struggle in the womb, the elder shall serve
the younger, father Isaac loving Esau; mother Rebekah loved Jacob. The deceit of
Rebekah and Jacob in securing Isaac’s blessing for Jacob and Esau’s piteous cry,
“Is there one blessing only, Father?”
What a set-up for discord. And, of course, this is explaining the situation of the
time of the writer, written back into the past – the present explained in terms of
the past – of God’s choice, God’s accomplishing God’s purposes through human
deceit.
To think of it makes one’s head swim. This is the Holy Family? This is God’s
Elect?
Well, let’s go again to St. Paul, this passionate Jew who has been converted to the
conviction that Jesus was God’s Messiah, God’s promised anointed One, who
would effect salvation for Jew and Gentile through his death and resurrection.
This Paul brings the message of the God of Israel acting through the Jewish
Messiah, Jesus, to the Gentiles, the nations, and he meets with success. However,
his own kinfolk are not convinced. Many are but it must have been obvious to
Paul that the mass of his people did not share his conviction about Jesus and that
is deeply troubling to him.
That is the problem he struggles with in Romans 9-11. If the Jews don’t turn to
Jesus as Messiah they are missing out on God’s salvation. They are missing the
boat. Well then, is God unfaithful to his promise to Abraham?
As we saw last week, Paul says, “No.” All of Abraham’s seed is not in the Elect
line: through Isaac, not Ishmael. Now, today, we move along a generation to Esau

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and Jacob. Paul is trying to defend God against the charge of failing to keep the
promise to Abraham and to Israel. So his argument: God has always worked
through the chosen, the elect. Not Ishmael, but Isaac; not Esau, but Jacob.
And why? No one can say. God has the prerogative of showing mercy where God
will, having compassion where God will. The choice cannot be questioned. There
is not a way behind the simple fact of the choice.
Brueggemann uses the best term – inscrutable: God’s inscrutable will. Listen to
Romans 9:11f:
…for the children being not yet born, neither having done anything good
or bad, that the purpose of God according to election might stand, not of
works, but of him that calls…
Nothing to do with character/worth/morality.
….
Then verse 13:
…I have loved Jacob, but I have hated Esau.
But what are we to say? Injustice?
I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy… Period.
Verse 18:
So then he has mercy on whom he will and whom he will he hardens.
Well, I’ve been tortured by that for years. It didn’t seem fair. Finally, just yield to
it! Who are you to question? And positively – Grace – not merit/work, lest
anyone should boast and Election to service not privilege.
If one believes the Bible as the Word of God – an infallible, inspired word – what
is one to do?
Well, I think it’s time simply to recognize what is going on here: tribalism, overagainstness, rivalry.
Paul was a Jew. He was captivated by Jesus and believed God’s plan for history
was coming to its climax. He believed the God of Israel was God alone and now
God was moving into history and beginning to bring all things to their
consummation…and so he interpreted the present, his experience, in terms of
Israel’s history. – Why are all his countrymen not believing in Jesus? Well, all of
Israel never did belong to the chosen line within the nation.

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Is this fair?
God can do as God wills.
Malachi 1: 2-3 – Jacob loved and Esau hated. Obviously a present situation of
threat, alienation and potential violence explained in terms of the ancient story
which is imputed to God.
I simply do not believe it was some word of God that sent Hagar and Ishmael
away. I do not believe God chose Isaac in the womb before the twins were born,
nor that God was party to the deceit perpetrated by Rachel and Jacob on old
blind Isaac.
Look at what literalizing them does. For example, the orthodox Rabbis who
transmitted the tradition about the promise of the Land of Israel to Abraham the
Patriarch such that a young student assassinates Rabin, who as a military hero
was able to lead peace negotiations with Arafat.
Or the terrorists who on 911 flew those airplanes into the New York Trade Center
and the Pentagon as acts of worship and martyrdom to Allah in the cause not of
Islam in its total faith tradition but on the basis of selective interpretation, which
places terror in the mind of God.
As I was contemplating all of this I was reminded of my friend Krister Stendahl.
You remember him – thin as a pencil, thus appearing 7 feet tall – the Dean of
Harvard Divinity School for 20 years and for 10 years Lutheran Bishop of
Stockholm –a great New Testament scholar and a gracious man. He was my
surrogate Bishop during the years of conflict. He preached for us one Sunday,
and of course you remember the title – Shepherds, Good and Bad – but the
weekend theme was “Good religion opens the mind and warms the heart. Bad
religion closes the mind and hardens the heart.”
I took his study on Romans off the shelf. Krister loves the Scriptures and he is a
marvelous interpreter and preacher. In regard to these chapters, Romans 9-11, he
understands Paul as seeing the unbelief of the Jews in his time as the means by
which the Gospel is taken to the Gentiles. But he interprets Paul as believing God
will redeem Israel in God’s own time and manner.
And then I remembered that N. T. Wright, who preached here in May with
Marcus Borg, had just completed his commentary on Romans published in the
New Interpreter’s Bible Commentary. It is a massive work and Tom Wright and
the Commentary on Romans is indicative of the stature he holds in the academic
world. He is, as we experienced, a gracious gentleman and a brilliant scholar. He
is also a conservative evangelical several paces to the right of where I am and, as
we experienced, also of Marcus Borg.

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So I thought what does Tom Wright do with those chapters 9-11? Well I was not
surprised. Tom Wright takes Paul as authoritative, writing under the Spirit’s
inspiration. So God is involved in the Isaac/Ishmael issue and in the Jacob-Esau
issue. And I was reminded of my early years when passages that seemed so
contrary to my human experience had to be interpreted so as to put a good spin
on what really seemed simply incredible.
Tom Wright is careful to guard against using Paul and these passages as
justification for anti-Semitism, for attacks on the Jews for not believing Jesus as
the Christ, the Messiah. Nonetheless Tom reads Paul in the traditioned fashion as
seeing Israel’s story leading to Jesus as the Messiah and as the failure of the
Jewish people to thus believe as leading to their exclusion from the Kingdom.
Whose reading of Paul is correct? Two brilliant interpreters; both taking the text
seriously, both deeply committed Christian scholars: two interpretations, both
can be argued.
One, Krister, includes Israel, and in the other the Christian Church supercedes
Israel and those of Israel who do not come to God in faith through Christ are lost.
And as I wrestle with this I have no doubt where I stand – it is with Krister, even
though Tom Wright’s interpretation is certainly there as well. But then I move
beyond the impasse.
The whole conception of God needs overhauling.
The biblical God throughout is a God running the show: intervening, interposing,
controlling, working out a plan in history with sovereign power. And that is the
God of the ancient text. I want to hear the text. I want to know that whole
tradition. I want to understand how the Christian faith inevitably claims things
that are untrue. And frankly, I do.
And then I need to have the courage to argue with the text, to critique the text
and to bring to the text everything else we know about the reality of which we are
all a part. Then I want to bring our global consciousness to the text. I want to be
able to think. I want to bring our knowledge of other faith traditions and of
historical consciousness, realizing how these traditions developed.
I need to remember that the great civilizations of the East were not even in the
purview of the three Abrahamic faiths. And I must add to the mix my
understanding of religion and see it for what it is – tribal stories – with all the
limitations and dangerous potential of tribal loyalty. And then, for many who
have come to see the primitive tribalism of the religions, perhaps one would
simply throw up one’s hands and be done with it.
But look where that would leave us – where vast multitudes are today, adrift
without anchor on a sea of meaninglessness in a pitiless universe.

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Richard A. Rhem

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And so I return to the stories, not now as divine revelation, but as human stories
of folk who have wondered about the meaning and purpose of life, about how to
live, how to find comfort and joy and truth and security. And I can look to the
stories that make up my story:
The story of Jesus – Paul wasn’t interested in the historical Jesus. He saw a
divine action in the cross and resurrection for the salvation of the world soon to
be consummated. He was wrong about that.
But what about Jesus? What about Stephen who died like Jesus, praying for his
killers and Paul standing by? What about what Jesus embodied? Is there still
something there? Can you imagine Jesus in Jerusalem today? Can you imagine
him a Jew turning away a Muslim?
Tribal religion has fueled the fire of violence and war. It has been exploited for
ethnic advantage, for social control, for domination – and always there is an
ancient text which is appealed to, a tribal story which is universalized,
absolutized, used to bludgeon the other.
Do you really believe there was a family filled with intrigue, conspiring, deceit,
treachery, hatred, and alienation that would be God’s Chosen, God’s elect? In
spite of groveling in the dust saying I am nothing and all is of grace, pure grace is
being chosen – and almost inevitably the chosen ones become proud of their
election and absolutize their story.
Isn’t it time to see those stories for what they are and to claim therefore not that
God is not the Creator Spirit of the whole but that our gods have been too small –
tribal gods made in our image. Must God – the Mystery of Being, the Infinite – be
indeed the God of the Whole, of the whole creation, of the whole movement of
history, of the whole human family – named variously, worshiped in many
different ways, imaged in diverse manners, yet the Mystery beyond our limited
tribal stories?

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>Abraham: One God, Three Names
From the series: Once Upon a Time…
Text: Genesis 12:1-3,21:8-21; Romans 9:1-8, 11:25-36
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
November 17, 2002
Transcription of the spoken sermon
It is serendipitous when a series of messages is set down and then in the
meantime one discovers a best-selling book, as happened in this case. Perhaps
you have read a major article in Time magazine about the book by Bruce Feiler,
Abraham. Bruce Feiler is a young Jewish writer who in the wake of 9-11 decided
that he would try to probe the nature of those three religious traditions that root
themselves in Abraham, he being a Jew, but also the Christians and the Muslims.
All of us together are of Abrahamic faith. All are rooted, somehow or other, in
that founding father. Feiler visited the Holy Land, interviewed the Christians and
Jews and Muslims, visited the shrines, the sacred places, and he writes an
illuminating and very fascinating study of these three faith traditions all rooted in
Abraham and where they have been and where they are today. As I speak to you
this morning you are aware of Hebron south of Jerusalem, the city of Abraham,
the shrine of Abraham, the place where Abraham purchased ground to bury his
wife Sarah and where he, himself, is buried according to tradition. You perhaps
know that it was in 1994 that a Jewish settler born in this country, Dr. Baruch
Goldstein, entered that shrine of Abraham and gunned down 29 Muslims as they
were at prayer. You are no doubt aware that on Friday of this week past
Palestinian gunmen killed twelve Israelis on the way to the shrine to say their
prayers in Hebron. And so, as we think about “Abraham: One God, Three Faiths,”
we are speaking about an ancient story, and we are speaking about events that
are on the late-breaking news.
It is so very important, I believe, that we get some historical and biblical
perspective on the relationship between these three faith traditions all rooted in
Abraham. You know the story as we have it in what we have always spoken of as
the Old Testament. We speak of it here as the Hebrew Scriptures; it is the Jewish
Bible, and the story of Abraham originally is recorded in the Hebrew Scriptures.
Abraham, a part of the cultural scene of his day, somewhere in the TigrisEuphrates area, Ur of the Chaldees, is moved with his family north and west to
Hebron, and then he receives a call.

© Grand Valley State University

�Abraham: One God, Three Names

Richard A. Rhem

Page 2

Now we don't know if Abraham was historical or not. He is perhaps a mythical
figure, a representative figure. In any case, that which we learn about Abraham in
the biblical story is corroborated by the archeological digs. There was this period
of time with these kinds of people moving about in that part of the world.
Abraham, according to the Jewish story, hears this call to go.
What is it to hear a call? What is it to have this kind of voice within that compels
one to pick up and to move on?
In any case, that is the story. Then he goes on his way with Sarah his wife. The
promise is to go and he will be blessed and he will be a blessing to all nations.
How will he have seed when he is an old man and Sarah is beyond the age of
childbearing? Well, this is the promise, of course. And so they wait and they wait
and they wait, and he gets discouraged. And then one day Sarah takes things into
her own hands and she says, "Have my slave girl from Egypt, Hagar," and
Abraham has a child, Ishmael, with Hagar. There are the natural, normal kind of
tensions and conflict, but in any case, Ishmael born to Hagar is Abraham's son
and Abraham is satisfied with that. But, God says no, according to the story.
Sarah will have a son, and this holy line is going to be through that son. I suppose
it has something to do with the fact that Sarah was barren we are told at the very
beginning of the story, and what the story is trying to say is that God is starting
over again. And God is starting over with a barren womb. Well, eventually the
child is born and it would seem that all is coming to fruition, except that one day
Sarah sees Ishmael playing with Isaac and all of that natural, normal, awful,
human jealousy and envy and fear arise and she says to Abraham, "Send her out
with her son," which he does. An awful story. And Hagar is about to give up when
she hears the voice of God, the angel of the Lord, who says, "There is water. Lift
up your son." He becomes the father of a great nation, the Arab peoples. So, there
is in the Jewish story itself the legitimacy of Ishmael as the father of many
nations blessed by God, the Arab people, so that all of these people are
interrelated. They are all cousins or whatever you want to make of it. That is in
the Jewish story itself.
And it goes on then, Isaac, Jacob, the twelve tribes, Israel and so forth, eventually
to Jesus, and then after Jesus comes Paul. Now, Paul is a child of the son of
Abraham. Paul is schooled in that Abrahamic tradition, that Hebrew tradition.
One day Paul has this blinding experience and he is convinced that Jesus is
indeed the Messiah, that Jesus is the Christ, that Jesus is the long-promised one.
He is turned around in his tracks. Paul the Jew becomes a promoter, an apostle of
this Jesus Jewish movement. But, Paul the Jew sees in the experience of Jesus
the breaking out of that particularity. And so Paul takes that message beyond the
limits of the Jewish community and he is the one who brings the gospel to the
world. He gets into conflict with the Jewish community for doing that. But,
nonetheless, it is his vision. He sees a universalizing, the universalizing that was
in Abraham. Paul now has to figure out how he, as a son of Abraham, can present
Jesus as the Messiah with his own community which is not going along with it, to

© Grand Valley State University

�Abraham: One God, Three Names

Richard A. Rhem

Page 3

be sure. There is a Jesus Jewish movement that might have carried the day. It
was not at all clear whether the Jesus Jewish movement would become the
dominant movement, or whether the rabbinic movement would come to the
ascendency. Paul is in that conflict situation. Paul loves his people. Paul wants his
people to see Jesus as he sees Jesus. Paul wants his people to see that that
universalizing promise in Abraham is being realized in Jesus, that there is now
the God of Israel for the whole world through Jesus.
But that is not the way it seems to be going. And so, in Romans he struggles with
it, and he says, "I could wish myself accursed if my brothers and sisters according
to the flesh could see this. If only they could see this!" But, they don't see it. So,
how does he figure that out? He said, "I guess that all of Israel is not Abraham's
seed. There is seed of Abraham that is other than Israel. There is a line of Israel
within Abraham's seed. It is narrower. Now I realize that everybody that came
from the loins of Abraham is not the true Israel."
Well, you can see what Paul is doing. As he works in his other letters, he says we
are part of the Mosaic tradition of Sinai and of Moses and that whole community
set up after the Exodus. Abraham was 400 years before that; Abraham preceded
that, Abraham did not come through the legalities of the Jewish community as
presently practiced. Abraham came by faith. Abraham had faith before he was
circumcised. Abraham had faith before there was a nation Israel. It was through
faith that Abraham was declared righteous. And so, right now faith is enough.
Circumcision isn't necessary. The temple isn't necessary. The temple, the
circumcision, all of that which was local and particular is now busted open. Now
it is possible through faith in Christ to come to God. You see what Paul just did?
Paul just used Abraham against Abraham's children. Paul reinterpreted Abraham
over against the community whose father was Abraham.
Six hundred years later there was an Arab, a trader and capable person, who had
a vision and heard a revelation. He came to the Jewish community in Medina and
shared the revelation and they rejected him. But, he was no one to pass off lightly.
Mohammed was quite somebody and he had this revelation, and he began to
write down what he heard and the long and the short of that is that we have the
Koran and we have the fate of Islam. Of course, Paul is a Christian, had a
revelation from the true God. Mohammed as a Muslim just got things screwed up
in his head. Right? Of course. Paul is our man. I mean, this other guy had too
much sun and sand. He started to hallucinate. He thought God was speaking to
him.
Well, what we have are three faith traditions and they all root in Abraham, and
there is the Jewish story and Paul doesn't deny the Jewish story, but he says that
is only the opening chapter and now it is here. And he re-writes the story in terms
of Jesus and Abraham and Paul and the Christian movement to the Gentiles.
Mohammed has his vision and hears his voice, writes his text, and there has come
this great community of Islam in the wake of that. So, we have Abraham: Three

© Grand Valley State University

�Abraham: One God, Three Names

Richard A. Rhem

Page 4

Faiths, One God. And we are killing each other. We are either killing each other
for religious reasons, or co-opting religion to fuel the conflict for political or
economic reasons. Our world is in jeopardy and in great peril, because we have
three traditions rooted in one founder claiming one God. That's where we are.
So, where do we go? Just briefly. There is a quote in one of the inserts in your
liturgy from this Bruce Feiler book, Abraham, and in the midst of that quote
there is a quote from Walter Brueggeman who is in the Presbyterian seminary in
Decatur, Georgia. I have met him, know his work. He is probably as fine an Old
Testament scholar as we have in the country today. And so, Bruce Feiler goes to
him and says, "Help me to understand this," and Walter Brueggeman as a
confessing Christian says,
"It is perfectly legitimate for the Jews to tell their story back to Abraham.
It is perfectly legitimate for the Christians to tell their story back to
Abraham. It is perfectly legitimate for the Muslims to tell their story back
to Abraham. What is not legitimate is for any one of the three traditions to
claim that theirs is the only story."
Brueggeman uses these wonderful words like “twisting the tradition” or
“confiscating the story,” because what he recognizes is that those stories are
interpretive movements. I love that phrase. Brueggeman says our religious stories
are interpretive movements. Our religious stories are the stories we tell in order
to try to understand who we are. They are stories that try to help us to
understand about this fascinating, perilous, exciting, fantastic, scary business of
human existence. That's what religious stories are. And you have interpretive
movements. You have stories told in order to give some sense, to make some
sense out of the data, out of the experience, out of the past that has come down to
us. The Jews do it legitimately as they tell their story, and we do it legitimately.
Paul had a grand vision. Paul could see that this Jewish Jesus was enough for the
whole world, and Mohammed, obviously Mohammed had hold of something, for
he brought about a tremendous tradition of people who yield their lives in
obedience to the will of Allah.
David Hartman has been another teacher of mine, a rabbi from Jerusalem. David
Hartman, when he comes to this story of Sarah and Hagar and that awful human
anguish and bitterness and rivalry, says, "Let's look at it, folks. We wrote the
story. Let's think again. Let's change the story." And I would say, "My God, David
Hartman, that's the Bible. You can't change the story."
And David Hartman would say,
"Oh, that's your Protestant problem. As a Jew the living tradition always
trumps the text. It is the ongoing living tradition, the oral tradition that
always has a greater authority than the text. Israel lived most of its
centuries without a text. It wasn't until the sixth century BCE, in exile, that
the scribes began to write down the story, and Ezra came back to the

© Grand Valley State University

�Abraham: One God, Three Names

Richard A. Rhem

Page 5

second temple community and they had a story. They dotted the i and they
crossed the t and that is when they began to get into trouble. They are
storytellers. They were better off without a text."
And David Hartman says, "Don't let the text lead you to places that you know you
ought not to go."
The more I wrestle with this and think about this, the more I am convinced. Do
you want me to say something radical? Do you want me to say something that
you can take out of here that will scandalize the whole community? It's high time
that we burn all the Korans and we burn all the Bibles. We'd be better off without
a text, because then we could look at each other in the eye, heart-to-heart and
begin to say, "What in the world is going on? Because when a text literally
interpreted makes me hate you, the text is wrong. And when a religious
community is bound to an ancient text that is leading it to destruction, to conflict,
to war, to hatred, it is wrong. A written text needs always to be interpreted by the
Holy Spirit and the ongoing story of life and the ongoing living tradition. And
unless we do it, unless we break free from bondage to the story, we will end up
killing each other, and you know it is a very real possibility as we sit here. We are
living on the edge of our seats. We are scared to death, and the whole is on
tenterhooks.
We read the quote down at the bottom, "There are fanatics who are misusing the
story and making it a literal word of God, absolutizing it and justifying their
hatred, and justifying their violence."
Most of the religious community just keeps it going by not being radical enough
and facing the story enough. It is possible, another scenario is possible. Bruce
Feiler, the young Jew who went on this pilgrimage, saw something different. He
saw another possibility. Walter Brueggeman, the Old Testament scholar, sees
another possibility. David Hartman, a rabbi in Jerusalem, sees another
possibility. I see another possibility. It is religion which is not doing what it ought
to be doing that has brought the world to the edge of disaster. It is high time that
we look each other in the eye, heart-to-heart, human being to human being and
begin to live out our story that is told us.

References:
Bruce Feiler. Abraham: A Journey to the Heart of Three Faiths. New York:
William Morrow and Co./HarperCollins Publishers, 2002.

© Grand Valley State University

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                <text>Reformed Church in America</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="372753">
                <text>Christ Community Church (Spring Lake, Mich.)</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="372754">
                <text>Sermons</text>
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          <element elementId="46">
            <name>Relation</name>
            <description>A related resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="372755">
                <text>Richard A. Rhem - An Archive of Sermons, Prayers, Talks and Stories: http://richardrhem.org/</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="372756">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="372757">
                <text>Sound</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="372758">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="372759">
                <text>audio/mp3</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="794211">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="372761">
                <text>A sermon given by Richard A. Rhem (Dick) on November 17, 2002 entitled "Abraham: One God, Three Names", as part of the series "Once Upon a Time...", on the occasion of Pentecost XXVI, at Christ Community Church, Spring Lake, MI. Scripture references: Genesis 12:1-3, 21:8-21, Romans 9:1-8, 11:25-36.</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1029395">
                <text>Grand Valley State University. University Libraries. Lemmen Library and Archives</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="408">
        <name>Abrahamic Faiths</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="407">
        <name>Religious Pluralism</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
