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From the series: The Human Face of God
Text: Luke 24:5; Philippians 2:11
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
Easter, April 12, 1998
Transcription of the spoken sermon

Well, we made it once again; we have paid our dues, walked through the
darkness, remembered the passion and pain of Jesus, lingered at least briefly at
the cross and now, thank God, we’ve emerged on the other side. A new world
dawns this Easter morn. The alleluias return, the thrill of triumph, unalloyed joy
permeates our being, all is well, life is good. Spring is here.
Thank God it’s over - Lent, that is, the minor-keyed music, the extinguishing of
light, the disconcerting "My God, my God, why ..."
Were I a decent pastor, I would let you off the hook, let you cut loose, ring bells,
shout Alleluias, let you have at least this day for total triumph, celebration, and
release.
But, for a few moments, let me ask you to reflect on the meaning of the stark
contrast between Good Friday and Easter Sunday.
There were only a handful of you here Friday noon, so let me picture it for you. In
fact, let me begin with Thursday evening. The meal shared, the altar stripped, the
sanctuary darkened, the choir lined the brick walls with tiny, illuminated crosses:
I then took the Paschal Candle, walked it out, snuffed it out, using the words with
which John tells the story as Judas was dismissed from the Last Supper, "It was
night."
Friday, the altar stripped, the old wooden cross leaned against the table draped in
black by Cathy Weideman who waited at the cross as a few pilgrims straggled in.
Then as Greg Martin sang, "Were You There?" she danced in vivid portrayal of
the nailing to the tree, the laying in the tomb. In a darkened sanctuary, the Seven
Words from the cross were read, prayers following, concluding with the somber
tolling of the bell.
That’s all - we heard the words again, "My God, why." "It is finished." "Into thy
hands ..."
© Grand Valley State University

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And now, look at us - White replacing black, flowers in resplendent beauty, joyful
anthems, hymns resonate with joy.
You know this; it’s all familiar. Some of you have actually experienced it again
right here in these past days. Most of you have had at least some exposure to it
through the worship of the season of Lent. But, I want you to think about it for a
moment.
Darkness to Light
Despair to Hope
Death to Life.
That is the central paradigm of the Christian faith, is it not? In the appointments
of the sanctuary, the mood of the music, the tone of the liturgy, the stark contrast
is brought to expression.
Now, here is a question for you: What is the relationship of Lent to Easter, of the
darkness to the light, of Good Friday to Easter Sunday?
For most of my life and ministry, this is how I would have answered the question:
The human family, alienated from God through disobedience, was lost in
darkness, destined to eternal death. God sent Jesus to live among us, to do what
we failed to do.
As Paul in Phil. 2 writes,
Jesus, though he was in the form of God, did not regard equality with
God as something to be exploited ...
That was Adam’s problem, who stands for us all - created in the image of God, he
asserted himself rather than humble himself as befits the creature before the
Creation.
Jesus perfectly obeyed, took upon himself the sins of the world, endured God’s
just judgment on the cross, and was raised by God as a sign that the penalty for
human guilt was paid in full; therefore, once destined for death, now by faith in
Jesus Christ we are destined for life.
It happened once for all, back there - The darkness was engaged, defeated. This is
now an Easter world. Therefore, the bare altar and darkened sanctuary, sign of
the judgment of God borne by Jesus, become the brightness of Easter morning
with new Easter fire. To say it in other words - Jesus’ death was about atoning for
human sin, absorbing human punishment, effecting salvation, life now and
forever.
That is the classic salvation myth we have inherited from the Christian tradition.

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A new age dawned.
A new world was born.
Death is overcome; heaven is won.
Therefore, we remember the darkness of his abandonment on Good Friday,
hardly able to wait to get beyond it to the celebration of this happy morning.
But, something doesn’t seem to fit with the manner in which we have observed
Lent. The focus has been The Human Face of God. We have followed the life of
Jesus from his baptism, his call and claim, his identity as the Suffering Servant,
the clarity of his vision to portray an alternative world - a world marked by grace,
including all and excluding none, a world marked by compassion, justice and
non-violence. In a word, Jesus was about the mending of creation, the shaping of
a different kind of society, about the transformation of this world, this good
earth, this present concrete human experience.
If that focus is true to the real Jesus, then one might wonder what all the shouting
is about because it doesn’t seem that much has changed in 2000 years. In the
course of the Lenten messages, I have had occasion to point out the parallel
between Jesus weeping over Jerusalem and contemporary voices weeping over
Jerusalem as Israel prepares to celebrate 50 years of statehood. I have pointed to
figures within our own historical experience who, following the way of Jesus,
have suffered the same fate - Gandhi, Bonhoeffer, Martin Luther King, to
mention only three.
Let me suggest that we have declared victory too soon. We have grasped eagerly
on the resurrection of Jesus as a victory that is ours to celebrate, as though the
battle’s o’er, the victory won, when, in reality, the battle is not over and the
victory has not been won.
Sorry to ruin your Easter, but if I would be a faithful servant of the Word of God
and honest with the human condition, I must tell you the old world has not
changed.
This is not an Easter world; it is rather very much still a Good Friday world. To
deny that is to live in denial. The only way to avoid that conclusion is to stick with
the old evangelical explanation that Jesus was about securing personal
forgiveness and promises of heaven through his death and resurrection. But, I
don’t know how one can fail to recognize that Jesus was about something much
larger, about the transformation of the world, no less.
So, what, then - is there nothing to celebrate? Is there no reason for singing an
Easter song? Is there really no Good News?

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There is good news. It is really good news, given an honest appraisal of the world
as a continuing Good Friday world.
The Good News is that our history marked by Good Friday is not the whole
story; it is part of something larger, the dimensions of which we cannot conceive
and from beyond history, beyond the limits of our Good Friday world, the way of
Jesus was confirmed as authentic, reflecting the way through one in the big
picture.
I came across a tribute to a biblical theologian who died December 30 of last year.
John Howard Yoder was a Mennonite, people whose roots lie in the Netherlands
in the first part of the 16th century. They were part of the radical Reformation;
that is, they went further in their reforms than Luther and Calvin. A
distinguishing mark is non-violence. They are pacifist, living in simplicity, similar
to the Amish.
In Sarasota, Florida, in February, we walked out on the beach in bright sunshine
with a great variety of human flesh exposed to the sun’s rays. There sat a half
dozen or so folk, full-clad, all in black, on lawn chairs, on the beach. They were
Mennonites, appearing so out of place.
John Howard Yoder was an excellent scholar. He served for a time at Notre
Dame. His most popular work was entitled The Politics of Jesus - a politics very
much as we have observed in our Lenten focus. In the piece, in memory of John
Howard Yoder, was this paragraph appearing near the end of that work:
The key to the obedience of God’s people is not their effectiveness but their
patience. The triumph of the right is assured not by the might that comes
to the aid of the right, which is of course the justification of the use of
violence and the other kinds of power in every human conflict; the
triumph of the right, although it is assured, is sure because of the power of
the resurrection and not because of any calculation of causes and effects,
nor because of the inherently greater strength of the good guys. The
relationship between the obedience of God’s people and the triumph of
God’s cause is not a relationship of cause and effect but one of cross and
resurrection.
Let me see if I can express Yoder’s point and thus express what I am claiming is
the really good news of Easter. Yoder is saying that the triumph of right is
assured. But that triumph will not be the result of the obedience of God’s people
as cause and effect.
The key to obedience is not effectiveness, it is patience, or persistence - the
willingness of following a way that never has and never will win the world. It is a
patient persistence in the embodying of the life of the Kingdom of God in the
midst of this world, which always manages to crucify such embodiment. The end

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of obedience is the cross. Resurrection is God’s action beyond the cross, beyond
history.
But the victory is assured. How can I believe that? Because - a quote from Yoder,
"The people who bear the crosses are working with the grain of the
universe."
I find that a fascinating statement. I have always claimed that the way of Jesus
cut against the grain of our natural inclination. And it does. The call of the way of
Jesus brings us into conflict with the way of the world, with the way of our
natural I inclination. But, here’s the point:
The way of Jesus goes with the grain of the universe. From beyond history comes
the power of resurrection. Authentication is God’s act after the Good Friday
world has worked its worst. We want to pull Easter into history. We want victory
now. We want to win now. But, we won’t to the extent we follow the way of Jesus.
It is not ours to win; it is ours patiently to live out the way of Jesus.
That will mean going against the grain of every natural drive and compulsion, but
it will be going with the grain of the universe - and it will count; it will count with
God. And the end will be transformation. To the extent that we would do that
seriously, we would stick out as sharply as Mennonites on lawn chairs, completely
covered in black, sunning ourselves amidst the company of nearly nude sun
worshipers.
Let me put this question to you: If Jesus’ death and resurrection were not the
effecting of your personal salvation as has been so commonly claimed in the
church, would you still follow Jesus?
What if we simply bracket the question of our personal forgiveness and assurance
of salvation - not denying that, but simply putting that to one side for a moment,
would you still follow Jesus because you really believed his way is the only way
the creation can be mended and the world transformed?
Again - apart from questions of salvation, heaven when you die, etc., apart from
that - do you believe Jesus’ way of being and doing is God’s way? If it got you a
noose, a bullet and surely a cross, are you so gripped by Jesus that you would
follow his way?
I could on this day simply let all the stops be pulled out, simply cut loose, claim
the victory. I suspect there is even some place for that. But, is that really honest?
Does that really prepare you to go back into a Good Friday world? Is it not more
honest for me to tell you that following Jesus’s way will meet the same opposition
today and have the same consequences today as then?

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So then, if you are really inwardly compelled to walk that way in fear and
trembling, partially, falteringly, you will not be disappointed by lack of success or
startled by opposition.
Why would one do it? Why did Jesus? or Bonhoeffer?
Because it is right, it is true - and to obey what one is convinced is right and true
is to be free, is to live, is to experience resurrection now, and the eternal
brightness of God finally. It is to be working with the grain of the universe.
Resurrection is a present freedom of spirit and hope for the dawning of Light
Eternal. It is living from inside out, true to one’s vision, finding hope in the
resurrection of Jesus as sign from God of ultimate authentication. When one
reaches that state of integrity of vision and life, one has moved beyond the
possibility of disappointment or defeat. That is life eternal.
Jesus is Lord to the glory of God.
That was, they say, the earliest Christian creed. Jesus is Lord. That was the
confession that flowed out of Good Friday darkness and the dawning
consciousness of Easter light.
Jesus is Lord! Kurios Jesus!
The whole world shouted back,
No way!
Caesar is Lord! Kurios Caesar!
Jesus is dead!
But, a few followers knew better "The Lord is risen!," they cried. Jesus is Lord!
Jesus’ way authenticated in a Good Friday world by those whose lives reflect that
way, living with the grain of the universe, trusting God that history’s final
darkness is not final; that the darkness will not forever suppress the light, but
finally yield to the brightness of Light Eternal.
The Lord is risen.
Jesus is Lord!
That is the good news in a Good Friday world.
History reels on its violent, drunken drive for power and glory toward death. But,
history is not the last word. The crucified lives. Jesus is Lord. Therefore, in this
Good Friday world strewn with crosses of the gentle ones, there is reason to hope
and to keep on loving, gracing, caring - forgiving, for from beyond history’s limits
dawns the Easter world.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>Freedom
From the series: The Human Face of God
Text: Luke 23:34
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
Palm Sunday, April 5, 1998
Transcription of the spoken sermon

Luke tells us that when Jesus came to the crest of Olivet and beheld the city, he
wept over it. He had set his face firmly to go to Jerusalem because, once he was
sure that he was claimed and called, and once he had a sense of his mission and
the vision clarified, he knew that finally it would be to Jerusalem that he must go.
And we find him now on the threshold of that entrance into the city where he will
confront them with an alternative vision, with an alternative possibility for the
structuring of the world, and as he stands there, he weeps, because, really, he
knows that that vision will be rejected and he will be crucified and his concern, I
think, was not in that moment that he would be crucified, but that Jerusalem
would reel on its way to terrible destruction, because it was a blindness of the
people, the blindness of the structures of society, structures of religion and
imperial power that would eventuate in that awful decimation of the city that
indeed did happen about three decades later.
Jesus wept. He came into the city as a peaceable king. Luke began the story of
Jesus, the birth, with the angels’ chorus, "Peace on earth, good will to those in
whom God is pleased." Luke makes Jesus’ entry into the city at this point the
coming of the peaceable king. In Luke there is no waving of the palm branches,
because the waving of the palm branches had nationalistic overtones. In Luke,
there’s no huge multitude; it is the disciples who praise God and hail him as
Messiah. Luke throughout pictures Jesus as the one who brings peace, who
pleads for a peaceable way, who stands now overlooking the city weeping,
lamenting, saying, "If only you knew the things that make for peace; but, you’ve
missed God’s moment," and consequently Jesus wept for that which would
transpire inevitably because he knew that the salvation of the world would come
about in one way only, the way of grace, of love, of reconciliation, and he could
see that that alternative possibility, call it the kingdom of God or the realm of God
or the way the world would be if God were running the world - that alternative
vision, he knew, would once again be rejected. And so, Jesus would be crucified.
Jerusalem would be destroyed. But the tragedy was Jerusalem.

© Grand Valley State University

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�Freedom

Richard A. Rhem

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Jesus was not a tragic figure, and what I want to focus on for a few moments this
morning is the magnificent freedom of Jesus. It is the freedom that is the
consequence of one being so secure in the sense of one’s calling, being so certain
that the will of God has bound him to a certain path, that he must proceed, but he
proceeds out of the inner core of his being so that the expression of his life is the
expression of who he really is, and that is freedom. It is to live one’s life in accord
with ones deepest instincts and core values, to live one’s life according to what
one really believes and knows to be right by the grace of God. That is freedom.
And Jesus, as he stands over Jerusalem contemplates its tragedy. He will be
crucified, but he’s free. He was free because he knew that what he knew was right.
He was free because he knew there is salvation and wholeness in no other way
than the way of reconciliation and peace. He was free because he knew that he
must be about the mending of creation, about healing and transformation, and
having that clear and being totally faithful to that vision, he moves now toward
the city with a certain freedom. Not without struggle. And his struggle is not over
yet. Nonetheless, he knows that he is acting not out of a compulsion, an external
pressure; he is acting not out of fear; he is acting not out of compromise or
cowardice; he is acting out of the core of his being, and that is freedom.
Jesus was able to act out and live into the reality of which he was totally
convinced and that is that the world needs an alternative to the way it has
conducted itself if it would ever find the salve, the salvation and the healing
which he believed was the intention of God for the human family and, indeed, for
the whole created order. And Jesus was willing to engage the structures of his day
and his society in the name of the God of grace, conveying that sense of God’s
concern for justice with compassion, opening himself up to those who were
rejected, thereby gaining the enmity of those who were the guardians of the law
and the proper structuring of society. But, he was free. He dared to do it. He was
bold to do it. He did it, and, of course, they killed him for it.
As we said last week, it seems as though nothing has changed. I brought this
magazine, Tikkun, with me last week and shared a piece from Kathleen Kern who
is a Christian who went to Israel to be a peacemaker between the Palestinians and
the Israelis and was disillusioned with the terrible conflict and hatred, suspicion
and fear that exists between those people, and the way in which the Israeli
government has treated the Palestinians. I want to be very clear that I love Israel,
and I respect Israel because it is out of the Jewish voice that their self-criticism
arises. This is criticism within, which is rare in this world.
Tzi Marx, a young man who was here three or four years ago at one of the David
Hartman Dialogues, and at that time, was connected with the Hartman Institute.
He writes a piece in this issue of Tikkun. It’s entitled "From Idealism to Idolatry."
He talks about his disillusionment. He had come to Israel as a young man with all
kinds of expectations about the founding of the state of Israel as a place for
people to dwell in holiness, and he sees what has happened, the co-opting of the
nation by power politics and the positioning of power, blind ambition and all of

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that which has gone counter to that spiritual vision with which the state was
founded. He says, "What happened to the religious vision in which I returned to
the Holy Land which stimulates the realization of holiness as in a kingdom of
priests and holy people? In which the holy ideals envisioned in the holiness code
of Leviticus, ‘You shall be holy, for I the Lord your God am holy,’ culminating in
the loving of one’s neighbor and the stranger would be realized?" He said,
"What’s happened? What’s happened?"
And then he recognizes that it is the religion, the national religion that permeates
the mind of a young man who takes his gun and assassinates a Rabin who is the
Prime Minister negotiating the peace process because perhaps in the negotiation
process, a bit of the land will have to be given away. And he says, "What’s going
on?" The national religious structures are pushing Israel to the brink again.
I read that and I thought, Dear Tzi, it’s happening all over again. You’re talking
about my Jesus standing on the crest of Olivet looking at the city and saying, "Oh,
if only you knew the things that make for peace!" Marx says, "There have been
voices; there have been pleas." But they can’t stand up against the rabid passion
of those reactionary voices that want to be powerful, to secure the borders, to
expand the borders. The plain fact is that the force of the religious Zionism of the
national religious party was too much for this "morally caring" counter
movement. It always is, isn’t it? It always is! The morally caring movement is
always trod underfoot, isn’t it? He says one of the reasons for this kind of
paralysis is that it is very hard passionately to vocalize moderation. How do you
get passionate about moderation? It’s a problem, isn’t it? Those who are good are
without conviction, and those who are the worst are full of passionate intensity.
Things fall apart and the center cannot hold. Jesus standing over Olivet, Tzi Marx
talking about Israel at 50 in 1998 - it is exactly the same paradigm; it is exactly
the same kind of thing operative. It is the structures of society that have selfinterest, the routinizing, regularizing, ordering of society, whether they be
religious or political or whatever they be - structures that hedge in, control. We
are told that a healthy society needs structures in order to exist, and that is true,
but once the structures are in place, you move from idealism to idolatry and then
blind ambition and ruthless power grabs result in situations that bring crisis and
the way of peace is again shattered.
Jesus was free enough to see it and to say it. He did not simply take the party line.
He did not simply submit to the established temple authority. He recognized the
problem was not the occupation of imperial Rome, but he would not play the
game in order to ensure that there was no disruption that might bring on Roman
retaliation. Jesus said, "For God’s sake, for the salvation of the world, there’s no
other way! Kill me if you must!"
Gandhi was gunned down because he tried to put Muslim and Hindu together in
the creation of a new state. On Thursday it will be 53 years ago that they hung
Dietrich Bonhoeffer because he dared, with fear and trembling, to join the

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assassination attempt against Hitler because he saw the demonic rise of evil in
National Democratic Socialism. He paid with his life, but he was free, he knew it
was coming. Thirty years ago yesterday Martin Luther King took the bullet that
he knew was coming. But, when you know something’s right, when you see it,
when you feel it, when it is the expression of the deepest core of your being and
you say it, you stand, you do it, you act, and you die for it, you die free!
Most of us, most of the time go limping through life accommodating, cowardly,
no heroism, no freedom, no joy, trying to get through, holding on sometimes with
white knuckle intensity, hoping the bottom won’t drop out or the roof won’t cave
in or they won’t call us to account, or nobody will ask us the real question. No one
will say, "What do you really believe?" What do you really believe would change
the church? What do you really believe would save the world?
Very infrequently, very rarely a voice is raised where it will make a difference. All
too rarely in this world is the truth spoken to power. And so, Jesus on the crest of
Olivet weeps over the city. Tzi Marx weeps over Israel at 50. And Nelson Mandela
has enough moral credibility to say to Bill Clinton, "Mr. President, president of
the most powerful nation in all the world, why don’t you get your act together and
clean up your policy over against these little gnats around the globe? Why don’t
you grow up and be mature over against a Castro? Why don’t you go to Kaddafi?
Why don’t you sit down with Hussein?"
Are they good people? No. Do they have ambition? Yes. Have they been powerhungry; have they threatened the peace of the world? Yes. But, what does it take?
It takes those who are in a position of strength to go to them because they are
acting out of fear, they’re acting out of threat. The world is always put in danger
because those who are weak are afraid and those who are strong will not bow
down and be human and humane and seek reconciliation rather than points in
the political polls by the bullying posture of arrogance and power. My God, is it
any wonder that the world is like it is?
Two thousand years, nothing different, because we’re not free. Jesus was free.
Bonhoeffer was free. Gandhi was free. Martin Luther King was free. And they all
got killed. If you’re smart and give up your freedom, you’ll die in bed. Boring. And
the world will go on its way to hell.
But the thing I love about Jesus most of all and the point, I suppose, where I
know I can’t follow him at all is that closing scene that we read a moment ago
where he says on the cross, being crucified, "Father, forgive them, for they know
not what they do." That’s freedom. That’s freedom.
I’m not free. I have a vision, but I’m not free of those who obstruct my vision. I
can’t really bring myself to say, "Father, forgive them." I want to say, "God damn
them." I’m not free; I’m not so sure of myself and so settled in love and grace that
I can look at my enemies and say, "Forgive them because they don’t know what
they’re doing."

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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I don’t think that was a statement of arrogance on the part of one who felt
superior over against humankind. I think that was the expression of the deepest
grace and compassion of one who loved people, who understood humankind,
who empathized with our human situation, who looked at us and said, "Father,
forgive them. Forgive them for what they need is forgiveness and grace, because
they don’t understand. They don’t know what they’re doing. Blindly, they are
driven by their passions, their blind ambition, their quest for power and glory,
their lust for certainty and security, their selfish greed and constant compulsion
to aggrandizement. God forgive them. God forgive them. Because they’re really
good people." Now, that’s freedom.
Jesus wasn’t play-acting. If ever I would see Jesus in all of his humanity as the
full face of God, resplendent with deity, it is when he is able to manifest that kind
of freedom that says to me and all of the screwed up nature of my life, "You’re
forgiven. I know you don’t understand oftentimes what you’re doing. God forgive
you." That, my friends, is freedom. And I can only hope as we go through this
week again, poor, compromising, unworthy servants that we are, we’ll hear the
word of forgiveness and just maybe now and again, here and there, take a
faltering step to follow him.
Jesus is somebody. In his face, I see the face of God.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>For the Salvation of the World
From the series: The Human Face of God
Text: Isaiah 53:5; Luke 22:42
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
March 29, 1998
Transcription of the spoken sermon
Kathleen Kern is a woman who was invited to write a piece in this Jewish
magazine edited by Rabbi Michael Lerner, called Tikkun, a bi-monthly Jewish
critique of politics, culture, and society, and this issue is given over to a
celebration of the 50th anniversary of the nation Israel. Kathleen Kern was invited
to write because she, as a Christian, had become convinced that the Christian
church had for 2000 years terribly abused the Jewish people, and she felt a
tremendous burden because of the anti-Semitism that has marked our past, when
we made the Jewish people Christ-killers, the kind of thinking that led in its
ultimate expression in the Holocaust. And so, Kathleen Kern, a Christian, went to
Israel and became part of Christian Peacemakers Team, and she came for the
purpose of bringing reconciliation between the Jew and the Palestinian. She felt
she could do this because she felt, having empathized with the Jewish people, she
had a sense of the responsibility of the church over against the Jewish people; she
felt she must first listen to them before there was anything to be said about the
state of Israel or Israel’s actions. And with that kind of posture, she felt she was in
a position to hear the Jewish voice and to seek to bring reconciliation with the
Palestinians.
While the 50th anniversary of the nation Israel is cause for celebration for Israel,
it marks 50 years of tragedy for the Palestinians. This is one of the most
complicated and tragic episodes in human history. Kathleen Kern was asked to
write in this issue, which celebrates the 50 years of Israel, and she wrote a piece
to which the Rabbi Lerner responded, "It’s written with detachment; there’s not
any passion in it." So, she wrote back to him, re-writing the piece, saying,
So you want to know how I really feel about Israel after having worked for
nearly seventeen months as a human rights activist in Hebron? You don’t
want the version that I give in presentations to Mennonite Churches that
emphasize our conflict resolution work? You don’t want the version I give
Jewish friends to avoid seeing that veil of pain drop across their faces? You
don’t want the version that I tell the children in my household so they
won’t grow up thinking Israelis are bad people?
© Grand Valley State University

	&#13;  

�For the Salvation of the World

Richard A. Rhem

Page 2	&#13;  

Are you so sure you want to open those doors that my rage has strained
against for the past two years? Are you? ... Israel makes me want to throw
things at a wall until the plaster shatters and my arms are too sore to hurl
anything else. Israel makes me wish that my theology permitted me a
purgatory where folks like Ariel Sharon would have to experience every bit
of the pain and terror they have inflicted on their victims over the last
decades. ... I have expended enormous energy to subdue my passion so
that I don’t repulse those who are only moderately interested in my work.
She said, "When I think of what I have seen and what I have experienced
of the horror visited upon the Palestinians at Hebron (that’s I have seen
men picking up little bits of people stuck to asphalt, walls, and trees in
Jerusalem. I have seen Israeli soldiers in Hebron beckon settlers to come
over and spit on terrified young men they have detained at a checkpoint. I
have seen the huge grin on the face of a man holding me up by the hair
with his left hand as he drew the other hand back to punch me in the ear.
From the ground I watched him run away with my camera held over his
head like a football, surrounded by other settlers in white shirts and black
pants. They laughed and cheered as though he had made a touch down. I
have been called "Nazi"; I have been spit at times too numerous to
mention. I have on occasion had Miriam Levinger cackle at me, "Don’t say
I didn’t warn you."
I have listened as countless soldiers and settlers who have never had a civil
conversation with a Palestinian - let alone eaten with them, lived with
them, babysat for them as I have - tell me all about what Arabs "are like."
... I have stood one too many times in front of tearful Palestinian women
asking me "Laish? Why? Why? WHY are they doing this? What have we
done?" as they nursed the bruises of their children who had been attacked
by soldiers or settlers ... My bile, my tears, well up as I write.
It is better to detach ... because otherwise I think my tears, my vomit,
would drown the Fertile Crescent.
Kathleen Kern is a Christian who wants to follow Jesus and went over to become
a peacemaker between Israelis and Palestinians. She knows the tragedy of the
Jew and she empathizes with them, and now she has experienced the tragedy of
the Palestinian, and I was thinking about this when I reflected on the theme of
the day, "The Salvation of the World." This magazine, Tikkun, the word Tikkun
means "to heal, repair, and transform the world." It’s what Krister Stendahl
spoke of when he spoke of the mending of creation. It is what Jesus was about,
and as I was thinking about the salvation of the world, and Jesus in the Garden,
and the suffering servant of Isaiah 53, I read the story of Kathleen Kern and her
awful anguish and her disillusionment, coming there with all kinds of idealism,
wanting to affect reconciliation, and seeing simply more of that terrible story of
human violence and the inhumanity of one to another.

© Grand Valley State University

�For the Salvation of the World

Richard A. Rhem

Page 3	&#13;  

That’s the world into which Jesus came. That’s the world that Jesus would bring
salvation to, and, as he was in the Garden, he knew they were going to kill him. At
his baptism he sensed he was claimed and called; he struggled with the nature of
that ministry and who he really was. He clarified his vision and determined he
was not a John the Baptist who was his mentor. It was not his vision to call down
fire from heaven and judgment upon the earth. He said, "I have come to proclaim
good news, liberation to the prisoners, sight to the blind." Jesus came with the
message of grace, of the nearness of God, of the presence of the kingdom of God
in the midst of the people here and now, and he knew finally he had to bring that
message right to Jerusalem, and he set his face and he came, and he knew the
collaboration of temple authority and imperial power would not tolerate his
challenge. They would kill him.
He didn’t want to die. In the Garden he said "If it would be possible, if there’s
another way, take this cup from me. Nevertheless, not my will, but Thy will be
done." And the silence from heaven was eloquent answer. There is no other way.
He must have thought about the suffering servant of Isaiah 53. Maybe he even
sensed that he would be that one who would die, that lamb who would go to the
slaughter, that one who would bear the transgression of his people in order that
his people might be healed. And so, he left the Garden to go to the cross, because
he knew there was no other way for the salvation of the world, for the mending of
creation, for healing and transformation than the way of love, the way of grace,
the way of inclusion, the way of pointing to God full of grace Whose mercy
embraces all. And they killed him.
Two thousand years later, Kathleen Kern, an idealistic Christian, goes over to
affect reconciliation between Israelis and Palestinians and she finds this horror
going on, even to this moment. And really it’s as though nothing’s changed. She
says she had written a book We Are the Pharisees. It was her testimony about the
fact that we Christians have visited on the Jews all these centuries this terrible
anti-Semitism, and as she reflects now, after seventeen months in Israel, she
says,
... As I re-read my words today, I ask myself, "Do I still believe them? Do I
still believe anything I believed before the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
infected me?" I am able to rise above my rage long enough to realize that,
yes, my words still hold true. Even given my experiences in Hebron, I don’t
think there is much I would add or change.
As a Christian white European American I want to take responsibility for
the injustices in the Middle East. If I can take responsibility for what has
happened, that gives me a small measure of control, right? The silence
roils in my stomach. I will continue. I still believe I have an obligation to
follow Jesus’ command that I love my enemies. Can I love Mr. Shektman,
Miriam Levinger, and the anonymous Kachniks currently threatening the

© Grand Valley State University

�For the Salvation of the World

Richard A. Rhem

Page 4	&#13;  

lives of my friends in Hebron? Yes, I can love them. They were not born
hateful. I know - no, I am certain - that God loves them.
And so, she stays. Another lamb to the slaughter. USA TODAY tomorrow could
have headlines, "Christian Woman Slain: Kathleen Kern Found Violated and
Raped, Left for Dead Along a Ditch in the Road to Jerusalem." She would be one
who would be slain because she sought to follow Jesus, the way Jesus was slain
because he saw in the suffering servant the model by which salvation comes to
the world. Salvation comes to the world through love that is willing to sacrifice
itself. Salvation comes to the world by breaking the cycle of violence. Two
thousand years and nothing has changed; it still hasn’t dawned on us.
In Texas a few weeks ago we executed a woman whose life had been transformed,
a woman who admitted her guilt and the horror of her crime, but who gave every
evidence of the transformation of life. But we put her to death, nonetheless,
because we want to keep the system intact; we want retributive justice. Finally,
we want vengeance, because we don’t believe the world can exist by grace and
love that forgives.
Oh, it used to be so easy for me. I understood Isaiah 53 and I understood the
Garden, the Lamb of God that takes away the sin of the world. As a good
Lutheran theologian put it, "Jesus took the rap for me." Jesus took the rap for us.
Jesus bore our sin. As Peter said, he bore our sin in his body on the tree,
therefore, my sin is gone, I have a pass to heaven, and you can have one, too, if
you’ll join me. Believe in Jesus and join my club. You’ll get to heaven, too. That’s
what the salvation of the world is all about. And that kind of an understanding of
the salvation of the world hasn’t changed a thing in 2000 years.
Jesus was not about getting me to heaven. Jesus was about transforming the
world. Jesus was about breaking the cycle of violence. Jesus was about dying
rather than denying that the only way the world can be saved is when we learn to
love instead of hate, to forgive rather than retaliate. The only way the salvation of
the world will come is when we are willing for that conviction to be lambs taken
to the slaughter without the exercise of pragmatic thought or rationalization,
simply loving and forgiving and absorbing and taking and loving and forgiving
and absorbing and taking it again, because, until that happens, we’ll continue to
execute prisoners whose lives are transformed, Israelis and Palestinians will
continue to blow each other up, and Americans will have to continue to build
citadel fortress America, because the rest of the world is growing and it will not
long tolerate our affluence leading to over-consumption, no matter how strong
we are. We’ll either love, or we’ll die.
Will there ever come salvation to the world? Only God knows. Only God knows.
Father, forgive them, they know not what they do.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>Firm Resolve
From the series: The Human Face of God
Text: Isaiah 50:7; Luke 9:51
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
March 22, 1998
Transcription of the spoken sermon

The Lenten focus for this season is The Human Face of God: that in Jesus the
presence of God, the reality of God was embodied, the Word was made flesh, and
in that face we see the face of God. But, not only in Jesus. The only access to God
is the human face; it is in the concrete encounter with the other that there is the
possibility, the experience of that other that transcends the human relationship.
John, in his first epistle, says no one has seen God, but the one who dwells in love
lives in God, and God lives in that one. And so it is in Jesus that the Christian
tradition is focused in order that in that human face we would get a clue as to the
nature and being of God. God, like Jesus, has that face as revealed in the story
that is told. And so, we keep telling the story of Jesus because that is where, in
our tradition, we say the eternal and infinite has touched down, so to speak,
become tangible, concrete, something we can get hold of, glimpse, focus on. The
face of Jesus is the human face of God and, in the human face, the body of Christ,
God continues to be manifest.
Jesus, baptized by John the Baptist, obviously a part of that spiritual renewal
movement that was inaugurated in John’s ministry, an apocalyptic ministry
looking for the end of the age, looking for the dramatic intervention of a God
from beyond, Jesus in the experience of his baptism, one of those people that felt
the claim and the call of God such that the gospel writers tell us he went off into
the wilderness to wrestle and to struggle and to determine the implications of
that call, the ramifications of that claim.
And he begins his ministry under the influence of John, but as we noted a couple
of weeks ago, before long, he’s uneasy with that. Jesus is not one who calls down
fire and judgment from heaven. As he wrestles and struggles, he finds another
model, not in the prophet Malachi, but rather, in the suffering servant, the
suffering servant upon whom God’s spirit is placed, who is called, who is gentle,
who will not crush the bruised and broken reed or snuff out the smoldering
candle, but with compassion will nurture the people of God. Jesus finds in the

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suffering servant another way to be about the ministry, a ministry now of grace,
of good news, of gospel, the proclamation of the kingdom of God being present
and the ministry of healing and of liberation of the prisoner.
This was the program he announced in his home synagogue as he began his
Galilean ministry, that ministry which was met with some considerable success in
Galilee eventually also got its own opposition. John the Baptist was beheaded by
Herod and as the whole program developed, there came a point in the ministry of
Jesus as we read it in Luke’s gospel, a watershed, if you will, or a turning point
when Jesus knew that things had to come to a head, that finally he had to bring
his message, his ministry, his program to the very heart and center of his own
people in Jerusalem, the city of David, City of the temple, city of everything for
which the Jewish heart yearned and longed.
There Jesus knew he must finally make his plea and give his appeal. And so,
that’s the point at which we find in this week he set his face firmly to go to
Jerusalem. You probably picked up in the servant’s song in Isaiah 50 that the
servant said, "I have set my face like a flint," and that was the stuff that was filling
the mind and heart of Jesus. That must have been the spiritual food in which he
was submerged and, as Luke tells us the story, he picks up that phrase to denote
the turning point, the point at which Jesus knows now what he must do, where he
must go. He sets his face firmly toward Jerusalem.
It’s rather interesting, I think Luke wants to embroider around that firm
resolution what Jesus had to be dealing with, what Jesus was and what Jesus
would not be. For just a few verses before the announcement of his face set to
Jerusalem, we have the disciples arguing about who will be greatest among them,
and Jesus has to set a child in their midst because, obviously, they haven’t
understood yet that that which he is about is not about posturing for position and
power. And then, James and John come and they say, "Say, we just shut down a
ministry down the road. We told him to fold his tent and fade into the sunset. He
didn’t do it in our name." And Jesus says, "You don’t get it, do you? Those that
aren’t against us are for us. There is a great work and there is a broad spectrum of
ministry that is necessary and you don’t shut somebody down because they’re not
using your formula or using your label."
Then he sets his face, he’s on his way now to Jerusalem, and they go through
Samaria. Do you remember there was already an indication of a change in Jesus
when he came from Judea in the area of John the Baptist and made his move to
Galilee: he went through Samaria. Most of the Jews went around Samaria
because of the hostility between the Samaritans and the Jews, but Jesus went
through Samaria and he engaged a woman at the well in conversation, which
raised some eyebrows, and he carried on a ministry there on his way north. Now
he’s coming back, and he comes through Samaria again and the group is not
received. There is hostility. And so, showing that they still haven’t gotten it, they

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haven’t heard the word of Jesus, James and John said, "Would you like us to call
down fire from heaven?"
Well, of course, they had good Hebrew models. Elijah did that a couple of times,
if you go to I Kings, the first chapter. When they came after him, he just called
fire from heaven to zap them out of here. John and James were in the tradition.
But, Jesus was breaking tradition. He said, "You don’t get it." In a text which is in
some manuscripts, but not all, and not in the printed text I read, Jesus said, "You
don’t know of what spirit you are."
Face firmly set. Identity clarified. Responding to the call, on his way. Firm
resolve. Jesus now knew who he was, what he had to do, and the spirit in which
he would do it. And the next stop will be Jerusalem and the crisis of his life and
ministry.
As we contemplate that, as I think about these Lenten Sundays and the call to
discipleship, I recognize that it is a time when in the church we have often laid a
heavy load on people. I’ve done it myself and I’ve certainly suffered under enough
preaching in my lifetime. You take a text like this, after they leave Samaria
someone comes up and says, "I’ll follow you wherever you go," and Jesus says,
"Look, foxes have holes, birds of the air have nests, the son of man is not to lay
his head. Don’t sign up without understanding the implications." Jesus never
took anybody under false pretenses. Someone else comes along and Jesus says to
him, "Follow me." He said, "Well, I’d love to follow you, but I’ve got to go bury my
father." Jesus said, "Let the dead bury their dead. This is urgent. Proclaim the
kingdom of God." Someone else comes along and says, "I’d like to follow you, but
I’d like to have a farewell party with my friends and family first," and Jesus says,
"You obviously haven’t put your hand to the plow, because once you put your
hand to the plow, you don’t go back."
Now, I’ve heard those texts preached; I’ve gone out of church with a heavy load of
guilt. I have recognized the stark contrast between my life and the life of Jesus. I
have noticed how far short my discipleship falls from the discipleship that is held
forth in the gospels, and have hardly been able to wait for Lent to get over again
so that we could get to Easter and resurrection and joy and brightness. And, as I
think about that, I don’t want to add one more sermon like that, I don’t want to
burden one more congregation one more time with that heavy load during Lent,
because, as a matter of fact, the radicality of Jesus’ claim and call is clearly set
and we sense that. But, as a matter of fact, that’s a radicality that cannot fall upon
all of us. What would happen if all of us would leave the dead to bury their dead?
Is that really what that means? Are we to take that literally? I think if you were
with me with the Swartz family, with Bob yesterday, you’d understand that one of
the most beautiful moments and anguishing moments is when the family is
gathered around one who is dying, the wonderful bonding, the beautiful love, the
departure in peace. And I’m supposed to say to somebody you don’t have time for
that because the kingdom of God is your claim? Well, what is this kingdom of

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God, then? And as far as having no place to lay your head, what would happen if
all of us would take literally that claim to sell all and follow Jesus? What would
happen if all of the civility and the humanity and all of the common courtesy of
our lives were suddenly to be thrown up in this absolute charge to follow Jesus?
And what would it mean to follow Jesus today, anyway? I know what it would not
mean in Zeeland, Michigan. It would not mean to gather over against those kids
that are wearing the t-shirts with the wrong lettering on them! It would not mean
to join the march for Jesus down the streets, impressing everybody with the
numbers of people and the triumphalistic kind of posture that seems to be more
and more prevalent in our communities. What is it to follow Jesus? Jesus had a
firm resolve; he knew who he was and he knew where he was going.
I want to say to you that this is a time in which we listen and we meditate and we
contemplate and we allow the images of Jesus to wash over us, and I trust that all
of us in the contemplation of that life stand in awe and feel a compelling urge,
likewise, to be faithful and true and to respond responsibly at the moment at
which we are confronted with this decision in whatever circumstance. You
wouldn’t be here if that wasn’t true of you. And rather than going out of here
today and saying, "I can’t follow Jesus. I’m not going to let the dead bury their
dead, and I want a roof over my head," understand that as a sign and a symbol of
the radicality and the priority of the kingdom of God, but recognize also that that
priority is to be worked out in the ordinariness of our lives.
I want you to go out of here today knowing that you are going to be stumbling
and mumbling and fumbling, you are going to be halting and limping and
wimping. Your discipleship will never measure up over against the gospel, you’ll
always fall short, and you’ll have to plead for mercy. And I want you to know it’s
okay because you’re only human. I know in your heart you want to follow that
way; I know in your heart you want to be people who are responsible and
compassionate and just; I believe that you are doing the best that you can. No,
you’re not. You’re not doing the best you can, but you’re doing pretty well, and I
want to commend you for that. You are good people; you’re serious people, and
Jesus with his firm resolve is a model and, as God gives us grace, we seek to
follow. But, you can go crazy with despair and give up in resignation unless
there’s some healthy balance and recognition of the totality of our human
response to that call of Jesus.
Some of you know Glenn VanNoord who was a member here with his family for
some years, who last Sunday died suddenly at age 51, and Nancy and I went to
visit the family in Grand Rapids, and the open casket had a plaque in the
background. I don’t know the history; obviously there’s a story about that little
plaque, but it had the words of Micah, "And what does the Lord require? The
Lord has told you to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God."
It was an epitaph for Glenn, and it’s a fitting epitaph for any one of us. Jesus had
a firm resolve; he knew he had to go to Jerusalem. There may be someone here

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who’s going to have to go to Jerusalem someday, I don’t know. Dietrich
Bonhoeffer had to go to Jerusalem. When they confronted him with the
possibility of joining that plot to assassinate Hitler, he had to struggle and wrestle
with his own pacifist inclination over against the demonic darkness that was
happening in the death camps, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer had to go to Jerusalem.
In that concrete situation, that’s how he followed Jesus.
Gandhi mobilized a whole people with non-violence in a violent world,
transformed a landscape. One day he knew he had to march to the sea and he
marched to the sea.
We have these models, we have these examples, and for us in the Christian
tradition, Jesus is that supreme example, that face. And we stand before it
condemned, of course, because we are accommodating and we’re compromising.
We don’t get it; we don’t see it. We are of the spirit of James and John all too
often. We jockey for power and position. We forget all of that so quickly in the
concrete situation. But, then, once in a while, now and again, here and there,
there’s a set of circumstances, there’s an instance, and suddenly we know, and
then we know, and then we go with firm resolve, and then we don’t count the
consequences. There may be someone here who is on the threshold of that, I
don’t know. For the most of us I think it’s going to be pretty much business as
usual and another Lent. And yet, as a congregation, maybe we have to ask
ourselves where is our Jerusalem? Is it time to set our face like a flint? Is there a
Jerusalem out there beckoning us in a world in which religious commitments
create the danger or the peril, in a world in which the demonic side, the shadow
side of religion continues with its exclusivism, its competition, its lust for power?
In a few minutes, Ed Post and I are going to be talking about worldviews. Can a
world exist with competing worldviews? Eward Cousins, in Christ for the 21st
Century, says you can’t do it in the old way anymore. Between 800 and 200 BCE,
all the great religions of the world arose, independently, and he thinks that
maybe we’re on in that second axial period when that which has prevailed for
2000+ years needs to make a significant turn. Now a global consciousness and a
global community. Is it that which we are supposed to wrestle with and struggle
with and advocate? Where do we have to move? Where are we going?
Ah, for most of us I suppose it’s going to be business as usual, a rather ordinary
Lent. That’s not so bad, because we’re only human. God knows we’re harder on
ourselves than God is. But, on the other hand, if we hang around Jesus, it just
might be that we’ll discover where we have to go in order to be true to the vision,
in order to be faithful to God. And if we see it, then we better do it.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>Identity Crisis
From the series: The Human Face of God
Text: Isaiah 42:3; Luke 4:1, 2
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
March 8, 1998
Transcription of the spoken sermon

The lines from Bishop John Shelby Spong that triggered the Lenten series for me
are printed on the inside cover of your liturgy this morning. The lines caught my
attention because they present Jesus Christ in most compelling fashion, the Jesus
Christ that grips me and that moves me:
Look not at his divinity, but look, rather, at his freedom. Look not at the
exaggerated tales of his power, but look, rather, at his infinite capacity to
give himself away. Look not at the first century mythology that surrounds
him, but look, rather, at his courage to be, his ability to live, the contagious
quality of his love.
Jesus is interpreted by the Christian church in very exalted fashion. But, that is
interpretation, the interpretation of an experience. More and more, we try to lay
back the layers that the tradition has placed on him to see if we can find the face
of that one, that Nazarene who was here, who was baptized at the hands of John
the Baptist and, in that experience, sensed that he was claimed and called by God.
Luke tells us that in the baptism he was praying and it was as though the heavens
opened and the Spirit in the form of a dove descended upon him, and he heard a
voice, "This is my beloved Son; You are my beloved son in whom I am well
pleased." With a claim and a call that dramatic, one might think that that’s all
there was to it, simple, clear, not to be doubted, and sometimes, as the stories are
written in the gospels, the exaggerated stories of his power, the first century’s
mythological framework in which we find him portrayed, it might seem as though
there was little room for any question, any doubt on his part, and yet there is
enough of that real Jesus that obtrudes through, even in the gospel portraits that
are written after Easter and paint him in exultant colors - there’s enough of that
historical core that comes through that we can see that it was not so easy for
Jesus. Jesus still had to determine who he was and the nature of the mission to
which God was calling him, and that didn’t come automatically.

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It’s rather interesting that in Luke and Matthew, who follow Mark, they all record
the experience of the temptations, Mark just a brief reference, but Luke and
Matthew, some expanded conversation with the devil in the wilderness after forty
days of prayer and fasting, and it is not by coincidence that the evangelist placed
that struggle, that temptation experience immediately after the claiming and the
calling in his baptism, preceding his ministry, obviously trying to tell us that
Jesus had to struggle to understand who he was and the nature of the work to
which God had called him and for which God had claimed him.
Mythological? I would guess so. I don’t meet the devil engaging me in
conversation out on the street, and of course, I don’t go into the wilderness where
maybe I would meet him. It’s an obvious creation of the evangelist in order to
make a point. Not that we deny the reality of darkness, the reality of evil in the
world. Not that all of the religions in the world have not recognized that
hindrance to wholeness and to the mending of creation. But, nonetheless, this is
obviously a creation of the evangelist in order to tell us that Jesus, in the light of
the claiming and the calling of God and in the prelude to the ministry he would
execute, had to figure out who he was and how he was to go about it.
The Gospel of John doesn’t mention the temptation experience. Nonetheless, the
Gospel of John does have John the Baptist pointing to Jesus as the Lamb of God
who takes away the sin of the world. John witnesses to the fact that he saw the
Spirit of God fall out on Jesus. He cannot do anymore than he does to affirm this
one, and so John the evangelist also ties in Jesus to the ministry of John the
Baptist. But he doesn’t tell us that John the Baptist baptized him, and he doesn’t
tell us about this wilderness temptation experience. What he does tell us in the
early chapters of his gospel, I think, is a narrative form of what Luke and
Matthew were trying to tell us.
It’s interesting that the Gospel of John, which is different in its chronology and so
much of its import from the other three gospels, presents Jesus witnessed to by
John, pointed out by John, but then going to Galilee. He’s in Cana of Galilee
where he performs his first sign, changing the water into wine, and then already
in the second chapter we have Jesus going down to the Passover in Jerusalem.
Now, if you read these gospels, you find that in Matthew, Mark and Luke, Jesus
goes to Jerusalem just one time, and it’s the last week of his life. But, in John,
Jesus goes back and forth to Jerusalem, and early in his ministry, he goes to
Passover in Jerusalem, and he comes to the temple and do you remember what
he does? He’s infuriated. He’s filled with anger at what he sees - the whole temple
establishment, everything that was going on there which he must have seen as a
barricade to access to the grace of God rather than the instrumentality through
which that grace is to be mediated. John tells us he made whips of cords, he
overturned the moneychangers tables, and he made quite a scene. It was an angry
scene, and, of course, people loved to have it so. I mean, this man has fire! This
man has passion! And so, they come to him. Now, still in the second chapter of

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John, we read that as they were coming to him, he realized it was because of what
he had done, of the sign that he had perpetrated, and John says, "But Jesus
wouldn’t give himself to them because he knew what was in them. He didn’t
entrust himself to the multitude that came rushing on.
What was going on? I suspect that what John was trying to tell us was that, in the
early phase of Jesus’ ministry, he was very much in the mold of John the Baptist.
Wouldn’t that be natural? John baptized him, and in his baptism he senses his
calling, and wouldn’t it be expected that, having identified himself with that
spiritual renewal movement at the end of the age as John presented it, that Jesus
would have carried on very much with the voice and the manner of John the
Baptist? John the Baptist was a fiery preacher of judgment and the wrath of God
to come. I suspect that Jesus began in that mode, and at least the chronology of
John’s gospel places Jesus and the cleansing of the temple in the wake of his
initial call and claiming as the manner in which he had determined he was to
carry out that ministry. Then he saw the reaction, and the reaction he saw was the
reaction of anger and hatred and violence.
Isn’t it interesting what religious rhetoric can do? Is there any rhetoric in the
world more volatile and explosive than religious rhetoric? And seeing that, it
must have raised questions in Jesus’ mind. Is this what I am to be about?
It’s a little creative imagination, but I think I understand what was going on. In
my earlier years, before I knew Jesus, I used to preach some angry sermons, and
afterwards I didn’t feel so good about it. Now, there’s no question about the fact
that you deserved it! But, leaving, I didn’t feel good about it. I had gotten
wrapped up in the rhetoric and I didn’t like what I felt, and frankly, didn’t like
what it did to you.
Now, if stay with John’s gospel for a minute, you’ll find that Jesus carried on a
ministry in Judea, down south of Jerusalem in the area of John the Baptist.
Matthew, Mark and Luke don’t tell you that. Only John tells you that he began a
ministry with his disciples down the banks of the Jordan, in the vicinity where
John had carried on his ministry and where Jesus himself had been baptized.
And if you read in the end of the third chapter of John, you will find that the word
got around that Jesus was drawing better than John. John was holding forth in
the First Presbyterian Church, and now there’s a Second Presbyterian Church
down the line, and it’s doing better. (It used to be a Reformed Church, but it’s
Presbyterian.) Now, they come to John and they say, "Hey, that fellow that
started out with you is down there doing this thing, and the crowds are going to
him." And then if you read a little further on, you’ll find that when Jesus gets
wind of this, he leaves. He says, "I’m out of here," because there was something
about the competitive nature of that ministry that he knew was a violation of the
very ministry he was carrying on. And we read that Jesus went to Galilee, and
how did he go to Galilee? He went to Galilee through Samaria, and at Samaria,
what does he do? He engages the woman at the well, which is quite an astounding

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thing for him to do. And James and John, who feel the inhospitable attitude of
the Samaritans, suggest to Jesus, "You know, maybe we ought to call down fire
from heaven on these Samaritans." Very much in the old mode, eh? The Sons of
Thunder, they were called. Damn them. Wipe them out! Ah, there’s something
down here in the visceral section of our being that responds to that. And Jesus
said, "Stop. You don’t know what spirit you are of."
And then he went to Galilee and carried on his Galilean ministry and do you
remember what happened when John the Baptist was thrown into prison? He
sent his disciples to Jesus in Galilee when he heard the ministry that Jesus was
carrying on in Galilee and what was his question? "Are you the one? Or should I
look for another?" Are you the one upon whom I had pinned my hopes for the
future? Are you the one that I mentored and nurtured in this ministry? Are you
the one who was to carry on the program of the kingdom of God when I lose my
head?
It’s really tough when you’ve mentored someone to have them turn away; when
you have taught and nurtured and shaped and invested yourself, and then find
them turning out to be quite other than the aspirations you had for them. I think
that was behind John’s question. And the answer to John’s question would have
to be, "Yes, and No. I am the one called and claimed by God, but no, not in the
fashion in which you shaped me, John, because the fashion in which you shaped
me is something that causes me to tremble. It flies in the face of what I’m sensing
God to be and what God is calling me to be."
Was there another model? Sure there was. And if John was modeled after the
prophet Malachi, then I think that Jesus in his own reflection, in his meditation,
in his fasting and in his prayer, came rather to see the suffering servant as the
paradigm for his ministry.
The suffering servant - there are four poems, four servant poems in Second
Isaiah, Isaiah 40-55. We read one of them, Isaiah 42:
My servant, my chosen one in whom my spirit dwells. The bruised reed he
will not crush. The dimly burning wick he will not snuff out. Not only will
he not call down fire from heaven, but he will take that which is bruised
and broken and nurture it and care for it and fan it into life.
I believe that Jesus, having sensed the claim and the call of God, and having
begun in one direction was turned around in his heels, so that it was not John the
Baptist who provided for him the model for his ministry, the ministry of
condemnation and judgment and the wrath of God, not the announcement of the
imminent wrath of God, but the announcement of the imminent breaking in of
the grace of God, the kingdom of God, the reign of God. A message not of doom,
but of good news; a message not of judgment, but of grace. That, I think, is what
those temptation narratives in Luke and in Matthew, based on Mark’s statement,
were intending to tell us - that Jesus didn’t come into this full blown, that Jesus

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had to wrestle and struggle and fight his way through to a sense of who he was
and the nature of that ministry to which he was called, that Jesus was not so cock
sure.
Interestingly, Luke tells us that the devil left him for a more opportune time. In
other words, it wasn’t over. Indeed, it wasn’t over. Look at the Garden of
Gethsemane. "Let this cup pass from me." He didn’t want to die. Look at the
darkness of Calvary. "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?"
Did he mean that honestly, genuinely? I think he did. Might he not have
expected, having come finally to determine who he had to be and how he had to
be - might he not have expected, convinced that he was that he was the agent of
God’s incoming kingdom, might he not have expected, even at the last moment,
that God would have done something, some dramatic move? I think so. And
nothing happened. And he died in the darkness, forsaken, trusting, forsaken,
trusting, doubting, wondering, clinging to God. Where else could he go?
The devil said, "Why don’t you get it over with right at the beginning? Why don’t
you make God show God’s hand? Why don’t you get a demonstration, a public
demonstration?"
Jesus knew that was not the way he was to go. He was to go by faith. He was to
trust. He was to embody grace, and he was to trust, and that was the only option
available if he would be true to what he sensed God was about.
Identity crisis. For us, too. Is grace still enough? Will we be doubly committed to
being a place of grace? Will we dare follow Jesus so that, if it comes to standing in
the face of religious establishment or political pressure or whatever else might be
out there, we will stand as the embodiment of the grace of God where there is no
exclusion? Will we dare to see Jesus as Jesus saw himself, as the servant of the
Lord who was God’s agent, in whom God was embodied? God still transcending,
God still larger, God’s embrace still broader?
Jesus did not see himself as God! Jesus knew himself claimed by God, the servant
of God, the embodiment of God. That’s where I see God; in the face of Jesus I see
God. Paul said, "We’ve seen the light of the revelation of the glory of God in the
face of Jesus." John has him say in the fourth gospel, "If you’ve seen me, you’ve
seen the Father." It’s the human face of God. That’s where I see God. I see
through the face; I see through the ages, giving me the clue to God Who is beyond
it, beyond him, beyond us all. In that beautiful, gracious, compassionate, open,
human being, I see God. God is like that. That’s how God is. And if that’s how
God is, in that human face, then I still will be able to find God in human faces - in
yours, and yours, and yours. And I will know the truth of that biblical statement,
"The one who dwells in love, dwells in God and God dwells in that one."

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It was not easy for him to gain his sense of identity and to know the nature of his
mission, but by God he made it! Thank God he made it, and thank God for human
community full of grace where God can still be touched.
It’s really quite simple, once you see it.
Christpower
Look at him!
Look not at his divinity,
but look, rather, at his freedom.
Look not at the exaggerated tales of his power,
but look, rather, at his infinite capacity
to give himself away.
Look not at the first-century mythology that surrounds him,
but look, rather at his courage to be,
his ability to live
the contagious quality of his love.
Stop your frantic search!
Be still and know that this is God:
this love,
this freedom,
this life,
this being;
and
When you are accepted,
accept yourself;
When you are forgiven,
forgive yourself;
When you are loved,
love yourself.
Grasp that Christ power
and
dare to be yourself!
John Shelby Spong, 1973

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>Baptized, Claimed and Called
From the series: The Human Face of God
Scripture: Isaiah 41:8-10; Luke 3:1-9; 21-22
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
March 1, 1998
Transcription of the spoken sermon
You may remember that the Episcopal Bishop of Newark, New Jersey, reached
out to me when he read in The New York Times of my affirmation of God’s grace
as extending beyond the limits of the Christian church. John Shelby Spong then
invited Nancy and me to be guests in their home last May when the English
scholar, Karen Armstrong, lectured for the Newark Diocese. Bishop Spong has
published a number of books, tackling controversial subjects and pushing the
church toward a more open posture, endeavoring to translate the Christian
tradition into a new key. Recently I came across one of his earliest writings, just
republished, and found these few lines prefacing the first part of the study which
is entitled, This Hebrew Lord.
Christpower
Look at him!
Look not at his divinity,
but look, rather, at his freedom.
Look not at the exaggerated tales of his power,
but look, rather, at his infinite capacity
to give himself away.
Look not at the first-century mythology that surrounds him,
but look, rather at his courage to be,
his ability to live
the contagious quality of his love.
Stop your frantic search!
Be still and know that this is God:
this love,
this freedom,
this life,
this being;
and
When you are accepted,
accept yourself;
© Grand Valley State University

	&#13;  

�Baptized, Claimed, Called

Richard A. Rhem

Page 2	&#13;  

When you are forgiven,
forgive yourself;
When you are loved,
love yourself.
Grasp that Christ power
and
dare to be yourself!
John Shelby Spong, 1973
Bishop Spong has been out in front for a long time and I realize more and more
that I am indeed a "late bloomer." Coming back from Europe in 1971, I was
beginning to look at Jesus "from below" as we said at that time, meaning that
New Testament scholars were focusing on the human man from Nazareth, the
Jesus of history, in order to understand and interpret how the developing
Christian tradition came to its affirmation of Jesus as "fully God, fully human."
The Christian tradition, the Christian church, is the consequence of an historical
happening - the life of one Jesus of Nazareth. That he was a fully human being,
no one questioned. That he was more than that was essentially the consequence
of the sense of his ongoing presence with his followers after his crucifixion.
That he was one with God or that God was with him in some unique sense was
the growing conviction of those who constituted that early Jesus movement. The
process of development of the claim that Jesus was not only human, but also
God, was not a claim Jesus made; in fact, it was not confessed in creedal fashion
until the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE and the culminating claim "fully God, fully
human" stems from the Council of Chalcedon in 451 CE.
What I began to understand as I returned from my graduate study in Europe in
1971 was that the high claims of Jesus’ divinity had to be understood from his
historical life, a very human life. But it would be twenty years of reflection and
preaching before I would preach an Eastertide series in 1992, From Proclaimer
to the One Proclaimed. One sermon in that series was "How a Man Became God."
Over the years, however, I was sensing more and more that it was Jesus
understood in his humanity that was really compelling. In Lent 1984, I preached
a sermon entitled, "Jesus, You Are Really Something!"
I remember that sermon; I acknowledged that I was really more moved by
Dietrich Bonhoeffer than Jesus. I realized it was because Jesus was never really
understood in his humanness; he walked through darkness and suffered, but he
had a leg up on us - he was also God, wasn’t he? How could he really know my
"trouble?" It was then that I came to clarity: Jesus experienced what he
experienced as a human being. He lived as he lived and died as he died as a
human being. He had no card up his sleeve; it was his vision, his faithfulness that

© Grand Valley State University

�Baptized, Claimed, Called

Richard A. Rhem

Page 3	&#13;  

led him to crucifixion. He died the way he died because he lived the way he lived.
He was really something! And to follow that one - that was a challenge!
Well, I review that path my own pilgrimage has taken, a pilgrimage you have
made with me for however long you have been here, because I want you to know
that as we begin a new Lenten journey, we are wrestling again with this same
Jesus, his way, his way of being human and his way of living before the face of
God.
And, hear this - precisely as he lives a human life before the face of God, he
becomes the Human Face of God.
When I read Bishop Spong’s "Christpower," I knew this would be my Lenten task
- to see Jesus in all of his humanness in order to see in Jesus - in his face - the
God before Whom he lived and to Whom he pointed.
We will not look at his divinity. We will not focus on exaggerated tales of his
power. We will not reiterate the first and second and third, fourth and fifth
century mythology that was created to give expression to the Early Church’s faith.
No, we will, to the extent it is possible, look at Jesus in all his humanness in order
there to see God.
Could anyone so live and so die, could anyone live with such firm resolve,
following unwaveringly a vision, could anyone manifest such freedom and
constancy except he had a deep sense of being claimed and called?
That is the first aspect of Jesus that we will consider: Jesus knew with profound
conviction - God claimed him; God had called him.
How did he know?
How does anyone know?
One sees, that’s all. One knows. One cannot prove it, verify the claim, or prove the
call. One gives evidence of the call’s reality and the claim’s validity by one’s life,
by what one does with the conviction.
This is true not only of Jesus; all who have lived out a vision faithfully with
courage and conviction must believe they are under a mandate from beyond
themselves. Such a conviction can be misinterpreted, can be the source of
destructive fanaticism. Great violence has been perpetrated by persons believing
themselves to be called by God. That is an ever-present danger. Nonetheless,
nothing of great significance has ever been done in this world without a sense of
claim and call, a sense of responding to a compelling urgency not of one’s own
making.

© Grand Valley State University

�Baptized, Claimed, Called

Richard A. Rhem

Page 4	&#13;  

This was true of Israel. It comes to fine expression in the so-called Servant Songs
of Second Isaiah. The reading for this sermon from the Hebrew prophet
expresses the call and the assurance that the Calling One will be with the servant
to strengthen and uphold. That sense of being called has always marked Israel - a
people called by God to be light to the nations. It was that deeply rooted sense
that marked Jesus, as well, and when the Gospel writers, decades after Easter,
told the story of Jesus, they gave expression to his sense of being claimed and
called at the moment of his baptism at the hands of John the Baptist.
Last week there were ten of us from Christ Community at a seminar at Duke
University entitled, "Jesus in Context." The leading Jesus Seminar scholars, John
Dominic Crossan and Marcus Borg, were part of the panel of scholars along with
five others, two of whom were Jewish, who teach Christian origin and New
Testament interpretation. There was great diversity among the seven scholars,
but agreement on two points - Jesus’ baptism by John and his crucifixion under
Pontius Pilate.
That there was a significant spiritual renewal movement under John the Baptist
is undoubted. John preached repentance and baptism as a sign of renewal at
what he and most of his contemporaries believed was the end of the age, the
dawn of God’s fresh visitation of God’s people, Israel. Jesus was a part of that
scene; he, too, was baptized and most likely shared the sense of the imminent
movement of God to inaugurate God’s Kingdom.
Jesus’ baptism is recorded by Matthew, Mark and Luke. John does not mention
the baptism, but associates Jesus with John in the earliest phase of his ministry
in Judea. Thus, there is unanimity among the Evangelists that Jesus began his
ministry after joining the Baptist movement and himself being baptized. The
three Synoptic Gospels record the heavens opening, the Spirit as a dove
descending on Jesus, and a voice saying, "You are my beloved Son with whom I
am well pleased."
What really happened beyond the baptism itself, we cannot tell. Luke alone says
Jesus, following his baptism, was praying when he received the vision and heard
the voice. What is clear is that the tradition that gathered around Jesus in the
years following his death ascribed to this moment the consciousness of a divine
claim and call. From his baptism, Jesus inaugurates his ministry that lasted from
one to three years.
What did it mean - that sense of being claimed and called? To what would it lead?
What would be involved in yielding to the call?
I think none of that was clear to Jesus as he sensed himself under Divine
compulsion. This he knew: no longer was he his own; he was embarking upon a
path the end of which he could not foresee. Only this he knew: The Hand of God
was laid on him. There was something he must do.

© Grand Valley State University

�Baptized, Claimed, Called

Richard A. Rhem

Page 5	&#13;  

"Must." Yes, in the sense of inner necessity. Could he have resisted? Refused to
yield? Certainly. But not if he would be true to himself, for he had "seen"
something; he had a sense of something; to be himself, he must give himself to it
whatever it was, wherever it would lead.
That is where the struggle comes in - Will I be true to what I have "seen," what I
know deep down to be true, what the vision burned indelibly into my
consciousness, what the "Voice" declared in the depths of my soul, or will I falter
before calling in questioning the conventional wisdom held by the majority, the
inevitable misunderstanding of what I "see," the questioning of my motivation?
And who am I that God should claim me for some task, call me to do some special
work? What of my family? Will my parents "see"? Will my spouse agree? Will my
children suffer? Will I have to give up all plans for normalcy? The cost. It will cost
to say "Yes" to the claim, to heed the call. It was thus for Jesus.
In the 16th century, Luther said, "Here I stand; I can do none other."
In our own time, Dietrich Bonhoeffer said,
I shall have no right to participate in the reconstruction of Christian life in
Germany after the war if I do not share the trials of this time with my
people ... Christians in Germany will face the terrible alternative of either
willing the defeat of their nation in order that Christian civilization may
survive, or willing the victory of their nation and thereby destroying our
civilization. I know which of these alternatives I must choose; but I cannot
make this choice in security.
Whatever happened that day on the banks of the Jordan, Jesus left there
baptized, claimed and called. He embarked on a path which would lead him to
the gory anguish of Golgotha.
Could he have said "No"?
Again, yes, of course. But, he did not; he yielded to the call because he saw
something, knew something, and had the courage to act on it.
Our lives will likely be marked by far less drama. Indeed, we might well pray,
"Dear God, choose my neighbor." Yet, in the peculiarity of our own lives and in
our life together, the same process is going on all the time - in our conversations,
in the positions we take or fail to take.
That is the point of this Lenten pilgrimage - Looking to Jesus, recognizing the
very real human situation in which he encountered the claim and the call.
In subsequent weeks, watching as he lives into that commitment, perhaps we,
too, will sense God in our own lives, become sensitive to what it means to live

© Grand Valley State University

�Baptized, Claimed, Called

Richard A. Rhem

Page 6	&#13;  

before the face of God, and, perhaps in gazing on the face of the one who lived
before the face of God, we may glimpse on his face the God before Whose face he
lived, and died, for Jesus is the human face of God.
That would be to make a good Lent.

References:
John Shelby Spong. This Hebrew Lord: A Bishop’s Search for the Authentic
Jesus. HarperSanFrancisco, 1993.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>Hope
Scripture: Jeremiah 32:1-17; Romans 8:18-31; 35-39
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
January 25, 1998
Transcription of the spoken sermon
Hope is the certainty that God will make good the promise of life. Hope is an
acorn dreaming its future. Hope is the inexplicable longing and expectation that
resides in the depths of the human soul.
Where there is life, there is hope.
So goes the familiar proverb. But, one could turn that around, as well: Where
there is hope, there is life. And one could add, Where hope is gone, life soon will
be gone, as well.
Yet, as someone has said, Hope and History never meet. That is, what our hope
longs for always outruns the reality we live. The same preacher said, "Why do I go
to church? It is longing - longing to see myself, you, this community and nation
and world fulfilled ... My most insistent feeling is, ‘There must be something
more.’"
That is a true reflection of our human situation - the disparity between the
longing of our hearts and the reality of our lives. Yet, hope is not quenched; it is
an inexpungeable quality of the human being and it is imperative to human
wellbeing that hope be fostered and nurtured. On what basis can we genuinely
hope? Certainly not on the basis of human ingenuity, cleverness or dependability.
Let me remind you of something I said last week when we considered
"confidence" or "trust." I pointed to the fact that we trust not on the basis of
experience, but in spite of experience, for our experience undercuts trust as often
as it confirms it. Trust is brought to experience, not derived from it.
So with hope: facing life with a positive, hopeful attitude full of expectation is
what we bring to experience, not what we achieve on the basis of experience.
When you think about it, it is quite remarkable that the human creature is
marked by an indomitable hope. There certainly is enough evidence about that
would seem to snuff it out. This is especially true in a society saturated with more
media coverage than is helpful or healthy.

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The Pope makes an historic visit to Cuba and gets second billing to the feeding
frenzy at the White House. The news media create a circus of all that devalues
around the lowest exploits of public personalities, playing to and pimping for
public prurience. And I am aware that what the public wants, the public gets, but
I’m not ready to grant that that fulfills the public trust of those who mirror the
happenings of our world. But, as long as money and profit is the sole aim of the
media, that is what we will get.
My point is that it is impossible to base the hope of the human soul on human
experience. Human performance in its worst aspects is focused on and magnified
incessantly and is cause for despair, not hope. Still, granting the presence of
despair and even cynicism, not without good cause, we continue to be people
marked by hope - and what a saving grace that is!
What, then, is its ground? You will not be startled that I claim that hope is
grounded in God.
Grounded in God.
It is easy enough to make that claim, but what does that mean? Certainly you
know me well enough to know that I am making no naive claim that God simply
fixes everything, that God will straighten what is crooked and right what is
wrong. Finding hope in God does not mean a denial of the darkness, a refusal to
acknowledge the hurt and pain of the human story, nor is it to see God as pulling
the strings of human events making it all turn out right. Multitudes have left the
church because their own experience put the lie to such Pollyanna thinking.
Yet, is not that deep longing in our hearts reflective of some profound intuition
that there is something more and we, with the whole cosmic drama, are in
process, on the way? And is it not precisely the constant rebirth of hope that
urges us on and calls us to work at world transformation? The French priestscientist, Teilhard de Chardin, said, "The world will belong tomorrow to those
who brought it the greatest hope."
Hope issues in desire, longing, the conviction that there is something more. And,
I want to say - something more here and now! We have tended in Christianity to
put off that something more to another age, another order. We have too often
given up on this world, spiritualized the promises of God’s words, internalized the
peace promised and abdicated our responsibility for Creation in all its fullness
and history in all its potential.
But that is not biblical hope. Let me tell you the story of Jeremiah as recorded in
the morning lesson. Jeremiah is called the weeping prophet. His was a difficult
task. He lived in the last days of Judah. He saw the decay of national life, the
doom on the horizon for a society that was unjust and lacking in compassion. He
saw, as well, mighty Babylon on the horizon and the inevitability of the coming

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conflict. He was called a traitor, one who undercut the morale of the people with
his dire predictions of imminent doom.
But, here is the irony: while he spoke boldly of Judah’s imminent defeat, he was
nonetheless a prophet of hope because he could see beyond the present tragedy
that there was yet a future for this people because God would keep God’s
promises. And this was not just wishful thinking. Chapter 32 tells of a relative
coming to Jeremiah telling him as next of kin that he should buy a piece of land
that had been part of the family heritage.
Were Jeremiah a cynic, one without hope, he might well have said, "No way."
Why should he pay good money for a piece of land that was part of a nation that
would soon be overtaken by the enemy? What good would it be to hold title to
land when chaos was around the corner?
But, Jeremiah had hope for the eventual restoration of Judah. He bought the
land, had the deed witnessed to publicly and instructed that the deed be buried in
an earthen jar to be preserved for the future when he or his family could claim
their inheritance.
This was a parable - a concrete transaction involving economic reality as a sign of
hope. Why Jeremiah? Because nothing bad will happen? Because maybe tragedy
will be averted? No. Jeremiah believed in the future because he believed in God,
he believed God intended a future for this people - in his words, because God was
the creator of the earth,
"Nothing is impossible for thee."
That is hope.
I’ve provided a paragraph in your liturgy from the theologian Paul Tillich:
The name of this infinite and inexhaustible ground of history is God. That
is what the word means, and it is that to which the words ‘Kingdom of
God’ and ‘Divine Providence’ point. And if these words do not have much
meaning for you, translate them, and speak of the depth of history, of the
ground and aim of our social life, and of what you take seriously without
reservation in your moral and political activities. Perhaps you should call
this depth ‘hope,’ simply hope. For if you find hope in the ground of
history, you are united with the great prophets who were able to look into
the depth of their times, who tried to escape it, because they could not
stand the horror of their vision, and who yet had the strength to look to an
even deeper level and there to discover hope.
As John A. T. Robinson, who quotes Tillich, remarks,

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Hope is so near to the heart of the meaning of God that, like love, it can
stand for it.
I find this same sense of hope as God’s presence with and life-sustaining
intention operative in the whole creation in St. Paul. Paul says we are saved by
hope. From the context, I think Paul means our humanity is saved, rescued,
preserved by the hope that is rooted in the conviction that God is engaged in lifecreating action in the whole cosmos.
Paul operates with the biblical paradigm of Creation-Fall-Redemption. Thus, he
sees Creation, the so-called natural realm, as under a curse due to human sin.
Frankly, I’ve always wondered about that. Did weeds spring up in Eve’s garden
because she ate the apple in disobedience to the divine command? Do animals
and we ourselves die because of sin? I don’t really think so.
But, what if we find another paradigm or model with which to understand the
cosmic drama and the human story? What if for Creation-Fall, we think of
emergent evolution? What if we translate Paul’s hope into such an understanding
of cosmic reality as it appears in the best science of our day? Then is it not
possible to see God as the source, creative energy, enlivening Presence in the
whole scheme of things?
A second reference in your liturgy is from the writer Nikos Kazantazkis from his
Report to Greco. Here is the poet with creative imagination portraying the cosmic
scheme of things.
Blowing through heaven and earth, and in our hearts and the heart of
every living thing, is a gigantic breath—a great Cry—which we call God.
Plant life wished to continue its motionless sleep next to stagnant waters,
but the Cry leaped up within it and violently shook its roots: ‘Away, let go
of the earth, walk!’ Had the tree been able to think and judge, it would
have cried, ‘I don’t want to. What are you urging me to do! You are
demanding the impossible!’ But the Cry, without pity, kept shaking its
roots and shouting, ‘Away, let go of the earth, walk!’
It shouted in this way for thousands of eons; and lo! as a result of desire
and struggle, life escaped the motionless tree and was liberated.
Animals appeared—worms—making themselves at home in water and
mud. ‘We’re just fine,’ they said. ‘We have peace and security; we’re not
budging!’
But the terrible Cry hammered itself pitilessly into their loins. ‘Leave the
mud, stand up, give birth to your betters!’
‘We don’t want to! We can’t!’

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‘You can’t, but I can. Stand up!’
And lo! After thousands of eons, man emerged, trembling on his still
unsolid legs.
The human being is a centaur; his equine hoofs are planted in the ground,
but his body from breast to head is worked on and tormented by the
merciless Cry. He has been fighting, again for thousands of eons, to draw
himself, like a sword, out of his animalistic scabbard. He is also fighting this is his new struggle - to draw himself out of his human scabbard. Man
calls in despair. ‘Where can I go? I have reached the pinnacle, beyond is
the abyss.’ And the Cry answers, ‘I am beyond.’ All things are centaurs. If
this were not the case, the world would rot into inertness and sterility.
Does not that give you goose bumps! I love Robinson’s comment:
The Cry - it links with what the Bible speaks of as "the call" of God, that
evocative, purposive love, which not only summons men to leave the
securities and satisfactions of life about them, but "calls generations from
the beginning" (Isaiah 41:4) ... But it links also with the cry of creation
itself, the yearning sigh of all being for its goal ...
There you have it; that is what I meant in the beginning when I said hope is
grounded in God. That is the explanation of the mystery as to why it is, how it is,
that the human being keeps on hoping. It is "The Cry," the relentless cry to
transcend all we have yet been and known. And we are driven on by this creative,
purposeful, enlivening life source. I can see no other explanation for the presence
of indomitable hope.
Thus we hope in spite of the news - Will the President be vindicated or will he
resign? Will Saddam Hussein back down, or will we go once more to war? Will we
acknowledge our arrogance and bully nature and open up to Cuba, or not? Will
the stock market steady or plunge? The list goes on; nothing is certain, all is
fragile and perilous. But hope will not be crushed nor defeated because God will
not abandon Creation and God’s purposeful love is for life.
I purchased an old book newly re-issued. I like the author; I like the subject
matter, but to be honest, I bought the book for the title. It is The Lure of Divine
Love. Is that not beautiful? Will you simply take that away with you from this
sermon? Let it seep into the pores of your being, because that is the deepest truth
of Christian faith - the lure of Divine love, pushing, pushing all things to life.
Hope is justified because it is hope in God, by God.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>Confidence
Scripture: Isaiah 54:1-10; Philippians 1:1-18
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
January 18, 1998
Transcription of the spoken sermon
Confidence is a very common word used to describe the level of trust one has in
oneself, in another, in the truth of a claim or reality of a situation. The word, as so
many words in our English vocabulary, stems from the Latin: The prefix con,
meaning with and fidere meaning trust. To live with confidence is to live with
trust.
Trust in what?
A variety of answers are possible.
One may have self-confidence in regard to one’s ability to perform one’s task or to
negotiate some difficult feat. One may have confidence in one’s favorite team. In
Green Bay, confidence runs high in the Packers only one week away from
America’s Holy Sunday. One may have confidence in the people with whom one
works, one’s spouse, one’s family. Obviously, one may have confidence in the
goodness and mercy of God.
But I want us to think about confidence more generally today at the top of
another year. I want to think about confidence as a fundamental attitude over
against the whole of one’s life, life itself and the attitude we share together as a
faith community.
Those who study human development point to the critical importance of
fundamental trust as the foundation for a healthy adjustment to life. Trust not
with a specific object attached to it, but trust as a basic orientation to life and
reality. Studies in child development tell us nothing is more important for the
nurturing of an infant through the earliest experience than the creation of a
secure and loving environment in which the infant, the child, learns to trust.
We know it is so. We know it is true for ourselves and we see it borne out in those
around us. Healthy, whole, fruitful, productive people are marked by confidence;
they live with trust.
Where does it come from?
© Grand Valley State University

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�Confidence

Richard A. Rhem

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If one learns very early to trust or not, it must be passed on from generation to
generation. But, where did it begin and on what is it based?
Certainly trust in life’s goodness and ultimate meaningfulness is not obvious from
simple observation of the human experience. Life is fragile, full of peril, haunted
by tragedy. Experience is mixed. When one stops to think about it, trust cannot
rise from experience. Concrete experience can often be the acid that eats away at
trust. As I said at Christmas, children love fairy tales because, while filled with
danger and darkness, things turn out all right and the good folk live happily ever
after. But, it is not so in life - any honest appraisal will in the end reveal human
experience as mixed.
Still, there is something in us that goes on, picks up again, trusts again. And this
is true of religious people and those who practice no religious faith consciously.
Let me suggest that for the religious consciously and the non-religious
unconsciously, confidence is rooted in trust in the goodness and mercy of God that at the heart and center of reality is God Who is for us, for life.
Let me point you to the morning lessons which speak of confidence rooted in
God.
Second Isaiah, as we call the unknown prophet of chapters 40-55, sings of an
eternal covenant of peace to the exiles of Judah living in Babylon. They were on
the edge of despair thinking their God of covenant, Yahweh, had abandoned
them, or had been overruled by the gods of the mighty Babylonian Empire. But
the prophet begins to preach to them, interprets their experience and tells them
stories of their past and encourages them to trust that God will yet deliver them.
They will go home!
He begins the poem recorded in chapter 54 with a call to the barren one to sing;
she who was barren will birth many children. Therefore, the tent must be
enlarged, the curtains stretched out, the stakes strengthened, the cords
lengthened, for "You will spread out."
The allusion to the barren woman would not be lost on these exiles. Who was the
classic barren one in Israel’s past? Sarah, of course.
You have heard me claim many times that Genesis 11:30 is a critical watershed in
the biblical narrative. The first eleven chapters of Genesis record the repeated
failure of humankind to live into the intention of the Creator and then God tries a
new strategy - choosing one family in order to bless eventually all families of the
earth. And how does God begin?
With Sarah, who is barren.

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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And not only Sarah, but Rebekah and Rachel and Hannah. The prophet of the
exiles played on the memory of his people to remind them that precisely in
barrenness, God acts to effect fruitfulness.
And then, if that is not enough to trigger the rebirth of trust, he reminds them in
verse nine of Noah. Out of the devastation of the Flood, God placed a rainbow in
the sky as a sign of God’s promise that never again would the earth be destroyed.
God’s faithfulness to Creation was signed with the rainbow. The Covenant with
Noah preceded the covenant with Abraham and Sarah. With Abraham and Sarah,
God sealed a Covenant of Grace with a particular family with the intention of
reaching all families, but with Noah, the covenant promise embraced the whole
Creation.
Would not that story remind Israel that Yahweh was no tribal deity limited to
their homeland, but the One Eternal God, Creator of all?
Stories. They are the stuff of human confidence. When trust wears thin, we tell a
story of what God has done and we find our confidence renewed that God will
give us a future.
Stories of faith. Remember and trust; trust God.
Paul was a son of Israel and when he experienced the blinding vision on the Road
to Damascus, he came to believe Jesus was indeed the Messiah, the anointed one
through whom God was effecting that universal intention of the covenant of
Grace sealed with Abraham and Sarah.
We noted that last week; the secret hidden long ages with God was now being
manifest. Paul was amazed and transformed. Now there would be no longer, as
he wrote to the Galatians, Jew or Greek, slave or free, male or female, but all one
in Christ Jesus. And, he adds, if you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s
offspring, heirs according to the promise.
No more barriers dividing humankind;
No more hostility,
No more outsiders and insiders.
Thus transformed, the former persecutor of the people of the Way became the
passionate Apostle of grace, the grace of God that is as wide as the whole human
family.
One of the ancient cities to which he took the story of God’s grace was Philippi,
where a congregation was formed, a community with whom Paul had his most
intimate relationship. There was a deep love affair between Paul and the
Philippian congregation as is evident from his letter to that church.

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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That letter begins with a rather extended thanksgiving - thanksgiving to God for
this people who had stayed in touch with him and provided for his needs. Now in
prison awaiting trial in the Imperial Court of Rome, Paul writes to express his
deep affection for this people who joined him in a partnership in the Gospel. And
in the midst of his expression of gratitude, he writes,
I am confident of this, that the one who began a good work among you
will bring it to completion by the day of Jesus Christ.
Here the confidence has a specific object - that the work of grace begun among
this people by God will be brought to completion. That confidence is, however,
based on Paul’s fundamental trust in God - the God of the beginning is the God
Who will be at the ending.
Once again we find that Paul’s specific confidence is rooted in that basic
confidence in God. Paul’s confidence was not based on experience; he was in
prison. He would die for his faith. But, the particular circumstance did not
dislodge Paul’s confidence. Indeed, he writes, the circumstance of imprisonment
had actually resulted in an increase in the witness to the Gospel.
I want you to know, beloved, that what has happened to me has actually
helped to spread the gospel.
The Imperial Guard received Paul’s witness; others gained confidence through
Paul’s imprisonment and bore their witness with greater boldness, and even,
what might have defeated a lesser person, some took advantage of Paul’s
imprisonment to further their own rival point of view. But, says Paul, so what?
Christ is preached.
I rejoice.
What lies behind this remarkable grace? Is it not Paul’s confidence that God is at
work in what seems the most adverse circumstances?
Confidence - a very great gift; a healthy way to live and engage life. Living with
such trust, Paul rested easily. This restless, passionate Apostle who traveled the
ancient world as a man with a mission of eternal significance found inner serenity
as he contemplated the turn of events because, through it all, he trusted God.
That was the bedrock of his life.
Telling Paul’s story does for me what the prophet telling the stories of Abraham
and Sarah and Noah did for the exiles in Babylon. Faith is renewed, trust restored
when we remember - remember the stories of those who have gone on before us.
There was a lovely celebration here last Sunday. There was joy. We have been
through deep waters, but can we not say with Paul that what has happened to us
has actually resulted in the furtherance of this work of grace? Is that not the

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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wonder of it all - that the challenge and the struggle have positioned us with new
freedom and joy to find our way to the embodiment of God’s grace here for the
healing of persons?
I could go back over the years to the times this text has been used here watershed moments when we were challenged to move out in a new dimension of
faith. Always the ground was the God Who has begun a good work here and
surely will not let it languish, but will bring it to completion.
Confidence. It is a gift. It is the way to live freely, fruitfully, because it is a life
rooted in God and the trust that God is for us. God will go with us, will keep us
and will finally bring us home.
All will be well. You can trust that, not because things work out, but because God
is God.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>It’s So Simple, Once You See It
Ephesians 3; Matthew 2
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
Season of Epiphany, January 11, 1998
Transcription of the spoken sermon, published in a collection of sermons,
Re-Imagining The Faith by Richard A. Rhem (2004)
The season is Epiphany, the season of manifestation, Jesus manifest to the
nations. The symbol is the star which led the Magi to the Christ child, where they
worshiped and offered gifts. The heart of the season’s truth is that the God of
Israel is God alone, Creator of the cosmos whose embrace is as wide as the whole
world; that what was embodied in Jesus, and came to expression in his life, was
the moment when the particular revelation of God to Israel broke out to enlighten
all humankind.
That such should occur was clearly a theme in Israel’s prophetic tradition.
Indeed, the calling of Abraham and Sarah was a particular call with a universal
purpose–that all nations would be blessed within the Covenant of Grace intended
for all peoples. The movement to the universal that occurred in Jesus was Paul’s
great insight–given to him, he claimed, by revelation from the resurrected Christ.
I cannot take you to the story of his “conversion” as he tells it in the first chapter
of Galatians or as Luke records it three times in the Book of Acts, but clearly the
consequences of his heavenly vision were his tireless efforts to bring the good
news that happened in Jesus to the ancient world.
Let me explain here that the reason the word conversion is in quotation marks is
to indicate that the popular view and easy assumption that Paul “converted” from
Judaism to Christianity is unfounded. Like Jesus, Paul was born a Jew and died a
Jew. The God of Israel is the only God Paul ever knew or worshiped. What
happened to Paul was not conversion from one world religion to another.
Actually, Christianity as we know it did not exist in Paul’s time, although a strong
case can be made for the claim that Paul was the founder of Christianity. But, out
of his profound encounter with the risen Christ in the vision on the Damascus
road, Paul was unintentionally drawing out the implications of Israel’s faith.
Paul’s moment of revelation was not a rejection of Judaism. Rather, he was
coming to terms with its most far-reaching implications: Yahweh was not a tribal
deity. Yahweh was God alone, Creator of the Cosmos, the One who enlivened all
things living. Out of his revelatory experience, Paul–without consulting the
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disciples in Jerusalem–went alone to Arabia for three years, trying to make sense
of his faith tradition and his encounter with the Risen One.
In a fascinating study, the English writer A. N. Wilson sets the context for Paul’s
visionary experience. Wilson says that Paul was part of the Temple police on his
way to Damascus to arrest the followers of Jesus. Was Paul already part of the
Temple police when Jesus was arrested? Was he even involved?
Certainly Paul knew the horror of crucifixion, and certainly he was party to the
violence of religious persecution. And, while on another mission of such violence,
he sees a light–a blinding light. He hears a voice which raises the haunting
question, “Why are you persecuting me?”
Wilson paints a picture of the world of Judaism in Paul’s day, telling us that the
Temple was magnificent, one of Herod’s great building projects. People from the
ancient world came to view its splendor. Yet, Herod was an Arab, purportedly a
convert to Judaism, but not a native Israelite, and the financing came from
Roman imperial funds. Wilson writes:
There it was–a splendid Temple set on the Holy Mountain with spacious
courts and colonnaded areas. Yet, the inner sanctum, the Holy of Holies,
could not be entered by any non-Jew.
Here was the conflict, the contradiction: Israel was to be a beacon, a light to the
nations, yet marked off its inner sanctuary as exclusive territory.
And the followers of the Way were, like Paul, Jews. Now the conflict was not only
between the insider Jew and the outsider Gentile, but within the Jewish
community itself–exclusion, persecution, violence. And he, Saul, is a part of it, on
his way to perpetrate more violence when he sees a blinding light and hears a
voice: “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me?”
Wilson uses creative imagination in setting the context for Paul’s vision, but not
without good biblical data.
The consequence of that encounter was not that Paul became a Christian. It was,
however, a transforming moment when he became convinced that Jesus was the
Christ–that is, the Messiah–and that, in Jesus, God was making evident what was
always true: that God embraced Jew and Gentile and the purpose of God’s
revelation to the Jews was to bring the light of God’s love and grace to all.
That was Paul’s realization consequent upon the revelation. That is expressed
nowhere so succinctly as in the Letter to the Ephesians. What does Paul
understand his mission to be? “To make everyone see what is the plan of the
secret hidden for ages in God who created all things.”

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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To make everyone see. The word in the Greek is photizo. From it comes our word
photo; a photo is the exposure of a film to light. Paul’s mission is to proclaim “the
light–becoming of the secret.”
And the secret? Verse 6: “that is, the Gentiles (the nations, in Greek the ethnai,
from which we get ethnic) have become fellow heirs, members of the same body,
and sharers in the promise in Christ Jesus through the gospel.”
The word mysterion can be translated as mystery or secret. Paul says it was a
secret hidden in God throughout the ages, but now made manifest. Now, Paul
claims, the secret is out.
The secret revealed is that the outsider has been included together with the
insider in God’s love and Messiah’s realm. For Paul, this was not simply a piece of
intellectual information, it was a life-transforming truth and a transforming
religious insight.
Now Paul sees something bigger than peace among rival Jewish factors.
Suddenly, or gradually perhaps, the lights come on for Paul. Not only is the
intramural conflict within Judaism wrong, so is the Jewish exclusion of the
Gentile wrong, at least now that light has dawned in Jesus. Now God has revealed
in Jesus what was always in God’s heart - love for all humankind.
Jesus brought peace. Jesus broke down the wall that separates. Jesus did away
with the hostility. Now Jew and Gentile were made one new humanity. Now the
community of Jew and Gentile would result in worship offered to God by Jew and
Gentile alike, bringing peace to the world.
Understand: here Paul moves out alone. Now he does battle on two fronts.
Against him is the Jewish establishment, which had employed him, and the
Jewish followers of Jesus who were not at all ready to open the doors to the
Gentiles.
Paul’s revelation made him a visionary. There was no rejection of Judaism. Paul
remained a Jew, but was rejected by his native faith. And he was contradicted
even by those who before him believed Jesus was the Messiah, for he saw
something more radical in Jesus than did James or Peter. Paul saw in the
revelation of God in Jesus Christ a Divine grace that embraced the whole human
family.
Following the destruction of the Temple at Jerusalem by the Romans in 70 C.E.,
only Rabbinic Judaism, the Pharisaic Party, survived and formed the basis for
ongoing Jewish faith and life. Gradually the parochial Jewish Jesus movement
died out. Because Paul had brought the good news of the God of Israel revealed in
Jesus Christ to the Gentiles, there emerged the Christian Church through which
we are included.

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Paul’s mission, he writes, was to make everyone see the “light- becoming” of the
secret that there is one God and one human family loved by God and thus, one
family called to peace, to community. He was consumed by the passion of his
insight. Listen to his prayer:
I bow my knees before the Father from whom every family in heaven and
on earth takes its name. ... That you may be strengthened in your inner
being with power through his Spirit, that Christ may dwell in your hearts
through faith, as you are being rooted and grounded in love. ... That you
may comprehend with all the saints, what is the breadth and length and
height and depth, and to know the love of Christ that surpasses
knowledge, so that you may be filled with all the fullness of God.
And Paul is not through; such ecstasy of imagination brings him to doxology:
…to the praise of the God who by the power at work within us is able to
accomplish abundantly far more than all we can ask or imagine–to God
be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus.
One cannot read those words, I think, without being caught up in the surprising
wonder of the vision that animated the apostle. He has no words sufficient to
articulate the fiery passion that would burst his mind and heart.
Remember who he is: a Temple policeman, committed to violence in the name of
the religious institution, who in a moment of blinding insight and years of
subsequent reflection sees the big picture. Paul sees the absurdity of claiming the
God of Israel to be God alone, Creator of cosmos, and then acting as though that
God was a tribal deity, mean-spirited, petty and narrowly limited in the offer of
love and grace. Suddenly for Paul, the light goes on, the truth dawns in him; he
sees! And his life from that realization was passionately poured out in the
proclaiming of God’s grace in Jesus Christ for the whole human family.
On the threshold of the Third Millennium, look at our world: still marked by
exclusionary claims of competing religions and religious institutions; still bathed
in violence fueled by religion; still crippled by divisions kept alive by petty
meanness and narrowness.
Look at the church in general, to say nothing of the perilous situation of
competing religions. The church is divided and threatened, marked more by
insecurity and threat than by confident joy; by shutting out rather than drawing
in; by creating fear rather than giving confidence; by judgment rather than grace;
by shrill claims rather than calming assurance.
Thank God we’ve discovered something together here. We do not have easy
answers, but we are discovering the real questions. We have not arrived, but we
are a people on the way. We are not morally beyond reproach, but we know the

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Richard A. Rhem

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grace of forgiveness. We do not love fully or perfectly, but we have tasted the
humanizing quality of loving the other. We have not the full spectrum of the
human family represented here, but we are learning the enrichment of embracing
the stranger.
We have been marked for a quarter century by a theology of grace that is
expressive of God’s love in action, inviting, embracing, healing. We have been
open to all and have excluded none that sought community here. That theology of
grace has worked on us, changing us, making us sensitive to a growing number of
those traditionally outside our community.
Jewish-Christian dialogue has opened us to the enrichment and beauty of the
Jewish community. Sensitivity to the claims of women has opened us to an
awareness of how injustice has marked us in the matter of gender. Breakthroughs
in the understanding of sexual orientation have enabled us to stand against the
exclusion and condemnation of persons of homosexual orientation. And we have
only just begun. But begun we have, by God’s grace.
Paul’s whole being throbbed with passion that could hardly find expression once
he saw it. “The secret is out,” he said. No more are there outsiders and insiders;
the whole human family takes its name from the one God who loves all and
excludes none.
And I pray you will begin to comprehend, to be strengthened in your inner being,
rooted and grounded in love.
“My whole life,” writes the apostle, “is a mission to make everyone see, to bring to
light the secret now made manifest.”
Ah, dear people, don’t you see it? God give us Epiphany eyes to see, to see!
It’s so simple, once you see it!
Reference:
A. N. Wilson. Paul: The Mind of the Apostle. W. W. Norton &amp; Co., 1998.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>The Fairy Tale Is True
Text: Luke 2:7; Revelation 12:5
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
Christmastide, December 28, 1997
Transcription of the spoken sermon
Children love fairy tales.
I remember a fairy tale feast when I was a child of preschool age. I was ill with
scarlet fever. The family was moved out into the garage, the house put under
quarantine. But, of course, my mother couldn’t leave me. The shades were pulled
and I was kept in bed. There was nothing to do but read to me - the same stories
over and over, Jack and the Beanstalk, The Gingerbread Man, Goldilocks and the
Three Bears. Mother read until she was tired of it. On occasion she turned two
pages at once, hoping to abbreviate her task, but I always caught her at it; I knew
the stories by heart.
But it made no difference; each time it was like a first time adventure.
This Christmas the family gathered to watch a video produced by David with all
the children as his research assistants - 25 years of this family growing up and
then each with their own families. There were several photos of me holding one of
the grandchildren on my lap - reading to them. That was usually a Sunday after
dinner pleasure, although I remember well getting very sleepy after a big dinner
and wanting very much to get to a serious nap when the little one would say
"Read it one more time, Bumpa."
Why do you suppose children love fairy tales so much? Of course, they are great
stories, but I think there is something more They turn out right; just as they begin with the classic phrase, "Once upon a time
..." so they end with, "... and they lived happily ever after." When you think about
some of the most familiar fairy tales, they are not all sweetness and light - there is
high adventure, danger, darkness and evil woven into the plot. A good fairy tale
has moments of high tension; they can be scary which is part of their attraction.
But, in the end, good prevails, right emerges on top and nobility and truth are
vindicated.
In that sense, the fairy tale is reflective of a whole philosophy of life and reality
and, in turn, it is a teaching tool for the shaping of one’s perspective on life.
© Grand Valley State University

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�The Fairy Tale Is True

Richard A. Rhem

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Stories not only entertain, they form a philosophy of life. And the classic fairy tale
reflects the conviction that the good and true will triumph in the end.
Later on when the child develops the capacity for abstract thinking, one can
discuss values, right and wrong, truth and falsehood and their implications, but a
sense of ultimate value has already been richly laid in the child’s being by the
tapestry of stories heard and lived.
I was thinking about this because of a few conversations I’ve had with some of
you who have wondered how to receive the Christmas story - a story that begins,
"And it came to pass ...", and is laced with angelic announcements accompanied
by a heavenly choir, Magi from the East following a brilliant star that comes to
rest over a stable wherein lies a newborn child born to a virgin.
Although scholarly research has investigated the whole of the biblical tradition
for two hundred years, that research has only somewhat recently seeped into the
church. But in our day, such research makes the feature articles of popular news
magazines at Christmas and Easter, at least. So, how does one deal with the
growing recognition that the Gospels are storied accounts of something that
happened in the past?
The question is not so simple. For one thing, we are dealing with something that
happened; we are dealing with the story of an actual birth event, not of a makebelieve character, but of one whose historical existence is almost universally
acknowledged. On the other hand, the story is a story laced with the supernatural
- angels and stars and kings and a miraculous conception - aspects one finds
surrounding the birth of other ancient heroic figures. Consequently, the stories
have been scrutinized intensively in an attempt to ascertain facts from fantasy.
I suspect this is inevitable. We make a faith claim that is entangled with concrete
historical reality - the word became flesh and dwelt among us. There is no way
that claim will not be tested.
Nonetheless, such scholarly scrutiny of the historical event is the ruination of the
story because the truth of the story is not in the narrative details, but in the
meaning of the story - that which is "coming to pass" in the event - which is that
God visits God’s people to rescue them from darkness and death and secure them
in light and life.
The story is the vehicle of the truth about reality, about the nature of things,
about the meaning and end of life.
Do you remember our Advent question - How can we who are top dogs sing the
songs of liberation of underdogs? Well, I am not going to repeat that, only to say
once again that the songs Luke includes in the birth story are songs of liberation
sung by people who have borne the heavy load of oppression and domination and

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they celebrate God’s visitation in this child through whom God will reverse the
fortunes of the oppressed and their oppressors.
The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light. Those dwelling in the
shadow of death have had the sun of righteousness dawn upon them with healing
in his wings.
I stressed during Advent the very concrete nature of the salvation referred to - its
social, political and economic dimension -This was good news of a different kind
of world for the poor and the marginalized. But now let me suggest that there is
another dimension spoken to, as well - the anxiety of being human. It is not easy
to be human and that is universally true for rich and poor, powerful and
powerless.
We are all afraid, insecure - We are subject to disaster, catastrophe, disease - and
we die and those we love die. Human existence is precarious, perilous, awesome,
wonderful, and fragile. Not only in our individual experience, but also globally.
The holocaust happened in the lifetime of many of us. Tyrants like Saddam
Hussein hold our world hostage.
In the ancient world of the birth story of Jesus, it was taken for granted that there
were powers behind the actors on history’s stage, Herod and Caesar and Pilate –
that the struggles on earth were reflective of cosmic conflict between the God of
light and life and the Prince of Darkness.
As you know, that time was an age of the expectation of the end of the age and the
literature that pointed to the end was called apocalyptic - a word meaning
"unveiling."
The curtain was drawn back and one was given a glimpse of the transcendent
world - the behind-the-scenes view of the powers of evil at work in the present and the sovereign God with whom the powers of darkness were in conflict.
The Revelation of Jesus Christ to John is such a work. John was given a vision of
what was going on in the cosmic drama. He was in exile for his testimony to
Jesus. The Christian community for which he wrote the vision was experiencing
severe persecution. Some were giving up their faith, returning to the imperial
cult. John writes to encourage them to be faithful, to hold on.
Chapters 12-14 are the center of the Revelation. A woman is pregnant. A dragon is
poised to consume the child. The woman gives birth and the child is snatched up
to heaven. There is war in heaven and Michael, God’s Angel Warrior, with the
heavenly hosts defeats the dragon who is thrown down to earth. Although the
victory is won in heaven there remains the mopping up on earth where the
defeated dragon is causing all the hell he can. The saints suffer greatly; yet they
sing of triumph because they know the ultimate victory is theirs because God has

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Richard A. Rhem

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conquered - for 1250 days, 42 months, they suffer the ravages of the dragon, but
this is a brief period.
If you go to the Hebrew Scriptures, Numbers 33, you will find that Israel made 42
moves on the way to the Promised Land. Thus, the writer says -Hold fast; this
journey so full of suffering will end in the security of God’s Kingdom.
A story, a vision. It borrows images from the Hebrew Scriptures – the Exodus,
the wilderness wandering; the woman, Eve, Genesis 3:15, the seed of the woman
will bruise the head of the serpent; the woman - Mary, pregnant with child; the
child snatched up to heaven - but through death and resurrection by which
victory is achieved, the dragon falls.
Well, I cannot give you a full account of the rich imagery of this vision, but I think
you can see how the vision weaves together images from Israel’s history and the
event of Jesus’ birth, life, death and resurrection.
Out of historical happenings whose details we can never recover, a story is told to
convey a deeply held conviction that in the end God will reign, the God of life and
light having conquered the forces of darkness that threaten human existence and
bring death.
Now here is an interesting fact - In Greek mythology, Zeus was the chief god. His
consort, Leto, was with child. The dragon Python was determined to kill the child.
Leto fled to the island of Delos where Apollo was born in safety. Eventually
Apollo returned to the mainland and at the great shrine, Delphi, Apollo slew the
dragon.
When John, on the island of Patmos, not far from the island of Delos, told his
story in vision form, he borrowed not only from the Hebrew tradition, but also
from Greek mythology to convey the message - that the God of life and light will
finally overcome the forces of evil and darkness.
The biblical story as a whole is rooted in the conviction that finally God will
subdue the darkness. It is the same conviction that underlays the beloved fairy
tales of our childhood.
That is faith’s conviction. That is hope’s ground - God is love.
Love triumphs.
Truth triumphs.
Therefore, trust.
Now, that’s the story; that’s what we celebrate. Just to tell you that straight out
may get us into an intellectual discussion and you might say, "Well, the data is

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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ambiguous." You might end up not trusting; maybe you would become a cynic.
But, let me tell you a story - deeper than reason can probe. You might then feel it
and know it beyond knowing.
Don’t you see it - the baby a sign of hope, of a future, of life?
Don’t you hear the angels sing?
Haven’t you seen a special star?
Don’t you hold absolutely to much that you cannot rationally describe or defend?
If you have eyes to see, ears to hear ...You know it’s true. The fairy tale is true Trust
Hope
Be of good cheer,
All will be well.

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>Too Good To Be True
From the Advent series: Songs Of Liberation
Text: Luke 1:47; Isaiah 7:14
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
Advent III, December 21, 1997
Transcription of the spoken sermon

Sometimes even the skeptic is forced to believe in the providence of God. I always
have to list my sermon titles a couple months in advance; they are printed a
month ahead of time, and last week how apropos, when hope was almost gone.
But, even better today - "Too Good to be True." Maybe, maybe there’s something
more to it than most of the time I believe.
The songs of liberation, the song of Mary today, the Magnificat, is a song of
praise in the conviction that God is doing something that will radically transform
the landscape of the earth - the world re-imagined in another way; human
existence in an alternative kind of community. With the announcement of the
birth of Jesus, Mary breaks forth into praise because God is on the threshold of
creating newness, a whole new world.
But, the question this Advent that I’ve been putting to you and we’ve been
thinking about is, how can we who are top dogs sing the songs of underdogs?
Make no mistake about it, this is a peasant song. This is a song of liberation from
one who has been oppressed and a part of a people who walked in darkness and
lived under the shadow of death. Listen again as Mary sings: God has shown
strength with his arm, he has scattered the proud and the thoughts of their
hearts. God has brought down the powerful from their thrones and lifted up the
lowly. God has filled the hungry with good things and sent the rich empty away.
That’s a song from down under, because the whole human situation is about to be
changed. But now, after 2000 years, who are the rich and the powerful? Who are
the well-fed of the earth? Obviously, it is we. How then can we honestly sing the
song of the underdog, which filled the hearts of those people of ancient time with
such praise at this mighty Christmas miracle of God?
Let me say just a couple of things this morning because it is a day not for heavy
deliberation, but for joyful music and song. But let me say this - I am more
convinced than ever that what the Gospel is about, tidings of joy, is this world,
here and now, human existence in this present situation in which we find
© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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ourselves. I am convinced that we have domesticated the Gospel, spiritualized it
and projected it out into another age when, as a matter of fact, it is for here and
now, for this place, for people, this earth, this age. Sometimes when you get an
idea like that and you begin to trace it, it’s like putting on glasses - everywhere
you look, it’s there. For example, that famous promise in Isaiah 7:14. It was given
to a king who was the king of a people who were under siege and there were all
sorts of international complications going on. It was about slavery or liberation in
a very real political sense at the time. That was the word of God that came from
the prophet to the king. And so, Mary’s song - is about the transvaluation of
values; it is about a grand reversal, the powerful down, the lowly lifted, the
hungry fed, and the full ones sent empty away. That’s what the Gospel is about,
and the challenge to the people of God who, by God’s grace and goodness, have
become so richly blessed, full of resource and power, the challenge is to learn how
to sing the underdog’s song while seeking to make reality for the underdog
humane and full of hope, marked by justice and peace.
The early Jewish Jesus community for which Luke wrote the story was a
community that believed that in its life it was beginning to realize another way to
be human. Let me say, 2000 years later, that that is precisely the challenge for us.
We are free at last and the future is open. We were seriously challenged because
we dared to say that sexual orientation was a matter of the diversity of God’s
great creation. We’ve been challenged because we refused to arrogate to ourselves
a corner on salvation and the light of God and the movement of God’s Spirit. We
were challenged because we dared take another look at this book and let it come
off the page afresh, not in a wooden, literalist way, but rather as the storybook of
those who were encountered by the living God in their historical experience. And
now we’re free; now we’re free to be that community of grace where joy abounds,
where there are no boundaries for the love of God, where there are no
exclusionary clauses to all of those who are hungry and thirsty and seeking rest.
We have a future before us to be everything that God is beckoning us to be and it
has not entered into the human heart yet the things that God has prepared for
those who love God and are willing to be the embodiment of all of that that was
embodied in the word made flesh. Jesus, that one who was born, God’s word,
incarnation of God’s intention, continues to be enfleshed where there are people
who hear that word, who imbibe that spirit, who will be marked by that grace,
and who with open heart and open mind will reach out to a world still much in
darkness, to many still living under the shadow of death. In such a community
there will be praise and there will be healing and there will be signs of what
ultimately will be when the kingdoms of this world become the kingdoms of our
God and of his Christ.
Now, listen to the story again. It cannot be preached. It must be sung. It is a song;
it is a poem; it reaches into the depths because it is so true. Listen to it and enjoy.

© Grand Valley State University

�Too Good To Be True

Richard A. Rhem

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(The Cantata, "The Christmas Story According to Saint Luke," by Richard Hillert,
continues.)

© Grand Valley State University

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                    <text>When Hope Is Almost Gone
From the Advent series: Songs Of Liberation
Text: Malachi 3:1; 4:2; Luke 1:78-79
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
Advent II, December 14, 1997
Transcription of the spoken sermon

Well, did you do your assignment? The one I gave you last week?
The assignment was to reflect on my question: How it is that we who are top dogs
can sing the songs of liberation of the underdogs?
We established last week that the songs of liberation with which Luke introduces
his Gospel are, indeed, the songs of liberation of those who are living in darkness,
who are longing to be delivered by the mighty hand of God, and that the famous
songs that have played such a critical part in Christian liturgy, the Benedictus
today, Zachariah’s song, the Nunc Dimitis, old Simeon’s song, and next week, the
song of Mary, the Magnificat, that those are, indeed, songs of liberation in which
a people are crying out to God to make good God’s promises to establish justice
on the earth and to bring peace to all humankind. The songs of liberation are
described very well by a recent author, Richard Horsley, in his book entitled, The
Liberation of Christmas, in which he points out, I believe, beyond reputation,
that the Christmas story is, indeed, a story of liberation which is a story told by
those who are underdogs as they hope in the coming of this one to have justice
established and peace brought to earth, the transformation of human society,
indeed, the transformation of the world. The songs of liberation are the songs of
underdogs.
We who claim them today are top dogs. And, if we really understood what we
were singing, we would realize that we are calling for the total transformation of
the world and that what is being imagined in those songs of liberation is another
way for the world to be, which would involve a radical transformation in our own
experience in human society. And so, in order that we might keep Advent with
integrity and celebrate Christmas honestly, I’ve asked you in this season to reflect
on that fact - that we who are top dogs sing the songs of underdogs, and I think
we seldom realize it.
The people of Israel were always a minor pawn in the power brokerage of
imperial affairs. They knew a moment of glory with David and grandeur with

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Solomon but, outside of that, Israel never amounted to much in terms of an
earthly power. They were caught between the great world empires, and yet they
had a sense that they were chosen by God to be God’s instrument for the effecting
of God’s will on earth. And as we saw last week, they had ancient dreamers who
dreamed of a marvelous world, the Messianic Age. There would be a sprout out of
the stump of Jesse, and he would change things. He would affect justice in the
land, he would have compassion for the poor, he would bring about a world that
was reconciled in all of nature so that the lion and the lamb would lie down
together and they wouldn’t hurt or destroy in all God’s holy mountain, because
the earth would be covered with the knowledge of God as the waters cover the
sea. A beautiful picture, and Israel’s dreamers dreamed of such a picture, and it
was a dream that lodged in the hearts of the people. They believed that, somehow
or other, history was moving in a way which eventually would bring about that
kind of a reality.
But, it didn’t come. There are those beautiful words of Second Isaiah in the 40th
chapter of the book by that name, "Comfort ye, comfort ye, my people," and the
prophet calls out to the cities of Judah, "Behold, your God." There was all of this
marvelous expectation as the exiles were going home from Babylon. They
believed that this was the time. But it didn’t come, and, as it didn’t come and
didn’t come, prophecy moved into the genre of apocalyptic which was a rather
despairing understanding of history, believing that history no longer had the
potential of realizing their dream. They prayed for the dramatic intervention of
God that would damn the wicked and establish the righteous and would bring in
the new age of God’s righteousness and peace.
Malachi was such a voice. He is around 450, 475 years before the birth of Jesus.
The exiles have returned from Babylon. Rather than Mount Zion being
established as the top mountain of all the earth with all the nations flowing to it
for instruction, they were a poverty-stricken, destitute people. They were still
under the dominion of the Persian empire, and their city was lying in ruins, their
walls were not built. This was a time that Ezra came to teach them the law again
and Nehemiah came to build the walls, and they built a temple. Herod built the
second temple. But the community was poor. It was a far cry from the glorious
picture of Second Isaiah, and Malachi, speaking to that destitution, that human
hopelessness, says, "But, my messenger is going to come."
In fact, Malachi probably isn’t the name of a prophet. Malachi means literally, in
Hebrew, my messenger. So this anonymous prophet is saying into a situation of
despair and darkness, "In the name of God, my messenger will come. And it will
be a time of judging and refining and purgation, and this will be preparation of
the people of God for that great and terrible day of the Lord, a day of darkness
and judgment when the wickedness of the earth will be thrown down and
righteousness will be established."

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Well, we know from our Gospels that the early Jesus movement understood John
the Baptist as fulfilling that role of the messenger who is portrayed by Malachi in
terms of an Elijah returned. Jesus said John was fulfilling the role of Elijah. And
so, this story of the nativity of John and Jesus is woven by Luke into a beautiful
tapestry laced with these songs of liberation to give expression to that which was
the deep conviction of that early Jewish Jesus movement that now God was
present in human form, was moving things toward that culminating act when
judgment would fall and light would shine for the people of God, and the
purposes of God would be realized.
The early Jewish Jesus movement was convinced that, in this one God was
present, God was embodied, God was moving, and the kingdom of God would be
effected, and the song that Zachariah sang, the Benedictus, celebrates this
movement of God in the establishing of the horn of salvation, the one that will
bring about salvation, and then he addresses his little child, John, and says that,
"You, child, will go before this one to prepare the people who, in the tender mercy
of God, will see the sun of righteousness dawn upon them. They who live in
darkness in the shadow of death will finally, finally receive this gift of God."
Well, that was the eschatology. That is, that was the understanding of the times,
the last times of that community, of that world into which Jesus was born, and
when the angel announced the birth of Jesus, "To you this day in the city of David
is born a Savior," that Savior we automatically with our Christian ears think of as
one who saves us from our sins in order to make us acceptable to God and bring
us to heaven. But, in the understanding of that Jewish Jesus community that
believed that God was present in Jesus, moving things toward the culmination,
that community that believed that it was living on the edge of the end, for them
the Savior was one who would salvage them, save them from their enemies, their
occupying power, those who taxed them, took their land, abused and exploited
them. Salvation in that community’s idea had social, political and economic
implications. Israel always knew that God forgave their sins. The Psalmist said,
"Lord, if you should mark iniquity, who could stand? But, with You there is
forgiveness." Read David’s marvelous Psalm of confession, Psalm 51, where he
acknowledges his sin and says to God, "But a broken and a contrite heart Thou
wilt not despise, O God."
It is not Jesus that brought grace. It is not Jesus that brought forgiveness. Israel
lived in the reality of a gracious God Who forgave them. But, Israel was also a
people that believed that God was to be experienced here and now, in this life,
and that God was concerned about their society, about their economics, about
their politics. That God was a God Who loved justice and righteousness, Who
spoke out through the prophets against all exploitation of people in all systems of
domination. This was the thrust of those songs of liberation that came to
expression through the Gospel writers as they tried to say what they understood
was happening in the appearance of Jesus and, before that, of John. Those songs
of liberation were the expressions of a people who longed to have the yoke and

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the burden and the oppression of the human situation lifted off their shoulders,
who were still dreaming the dream of the ancient dreamer, who said "That day is
coming when there will be justice, mercy, peace, equity in all of God’s creation."
Well, that’s what Jesus was about. Jesus addressed the concrete social situation
of his day. He announced that God Who in grace is near to people. He especially
embraced those who had been excluded. He made it clear through his table
fellowship to those with whom he broke bread, that the embrace of God was as
broad as the world and all humankind. No one, the voiceless ones, the
marginalized, the excluded - none of them would be left out of the grace of the
kingdom of God. And for that he was crucified, because the kind of social vision
that Jesus had, with its political and economic implications, is the kind of vision
that those who have vested interest in the status quo will not long tolerate,
because it will transform human society and, rather than exploitation and
domination, there will be community, justice and peace.
Jesus was crucified for his vision, for that which he incarnated and embodied,
and they experienced his presence and fully thought that he would return at any
moment. That’s obvious from a study of the New Testament. They believed that
this one who had come, who was crucified, whose living presence they
experienced would return and all things would come to their consummation. But,
they didn’t, did they? It’s been now 2000 years, and we don’t really look into the
sky every morning to see whether or not this may be the day of his appearing.
Although, if you travel I-96, there is a billboard where Jesus is in the rump seat of
a plane predicting to come out of the blue soon. I can’t believe that kind of
ignorance, frankly. It is such a terrible distortion of the Gospel. It is the
perpetuation of an eschatology, an idea of the last things, which history itself has
clearly indicated was the wrong conception, and what it has enabled us to do is to
turn the Gospel of Jesus into a salvation cult by which we receive the forgiveness
of sins and peace of God and preparation for heaven. We have taken the Gospel of
Jesus Christ that was a world-transforming movement, domesticated it into a
religious cult by which we find our personal peace while we go on with our lives
politically, economically, socially, as though we never heard the songs of
liberation.
We have been able to take the Gospel with its Christmas story and subvert it into
a marvelously beautiful, moving pageant that lacks totally what it really is about,
which is about changing the world to reflect the intention of God. So, we still say,
"When is the day of his appearing? When that comes out there some way, then
it’ll all be fixed." As a matter of fact, it would seem to me we ought to go back and
listen again to see whether or not it may be erroneous to be waiting for some
future act of God to make it right.
Possibly, possibly what God intends is for top dogs not just to sing absentmindedly the songs of underdogs, but to begin to use their power and resource to
implement, to make real, the longing of the heart of the underdog that comes to

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expression in those songs that plead for the dawning of light, for the rising of the
sun of righteousness, for the establishment of justice and the bringing of peace.
Maybe, maybe we who are top dogs are called upon to be the agents to effect the
cry of God’s heart that comes to expression through the underdogs. I wonder if
God has anybody doing anything today. You know, Messiah means anointed,
anointed with the Spirit, and Christ is the Greek word for Messiah. I wonder if
God has any Christs in the world today, any people anointed with the Spirit who
are seeking to effect the intention of God in a world that still lies, so much of it, in
darkness, with so many people still living in the shadow of death.
Let me make a suggestion; it will probably blow your mind and you will laugh me
off the stool. Let me suggest another Jew - Steven Spielberg. You see, I wonder. It
seems to me that, to the extent that the church has become a ghetto of salvation
when we come together for our own personal spiritual renewal and our own
eternal security, where we get our emotional fix through our religious devotion,
maybe having become a ghetto and made the Gospel a salvation cult, God says,
"Well, if you want to be off in that backwater, okay. Okay. ‘Cause it’s not bad to
pray and sing hymns and worship. In fact, you really ought to be doing that,
because that’s where you get the vision and the strength to go out and change the
world. But, if you’re not going to do anything about the world, if you’re just going
to enjoy this little pipeline you have to me, then I’m going to have to find some
people in the strangest places. I’m going to have to find some people, for
example, in show biz."
Perhaps a Steven Spielberg, who a couple of seasons ago, two or three, gave us
"Schindler’s List," who showed us a flamboyant playboy who got gripped in the
midst of the Holocaust with the mass murder of the Jewish people and who used
his industry and his fortune in order to rescue a couple of thousand of them. If
you don’t like Holocaust stuff, then don’t watch "Schindler’s List." But, I wonder
if Schindler was not a Christ, doing what top dogs ought to do.
Another film by Spielberg is coming out: "Amistad." Amistad was the name of a
slave ship that was bringing slaves from Africa around 1839, and they mutinied,
these slaves. They killed the captain and several of the crew, and they impressed
the navigators and told them to turn them around and take them back to Africa,
but the navigators fooled them and they found themselves sailing into Long
Island Sound where they were captured by a U.S. Navy ship and the mutineers,
the blacks from Africa, were thrown in the brig and brought to trial. But, in one of
the shining moments of the Christian Church, in this case, the Congregational
Church, which is one of the merging bodies that forms the United Church of
Christ, the church people began to lobby on behalf of these blacks. The faculty
and the students of Yale University went to bat for them. Former President John
Quincy Adams became their defense attorney. And in one of the better moments
of American history, in American church history, these blacks were vindicated,
their mutiny declared justified, and they were sent back to Africa, and I just

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wonder if someone like Steven Spielberg who can bring us those kinds of stories
might not be someone upon whom the Spirit of God is dwelling in order to shake
us loose, break us out, help us to understand that we have no business singing
songs of liberation if they are simply the caressing of our own satisfied souls, that
we who are the rich and the powerful, if not famous, are the ones upon whom it is
incumbent to effect in human society the longing of the songs of liberation.
It is that task to which I believe we are called. It is in contemplating that task that
we will keep Advent. It is in welcoming that kind of a Savior that we will be
honest with Christmas, and it is to that end that I believe Christ Community must
be committed, for who knows but what some of you have come to the kingdom
for such a time as this? Not only to sing songs of liberation, but to bring liberty to
those who are oppressed, that the sun of righteousness may dawn upon us with
healing in its wings. Ah, wouldn’t that be something?

References:
Richard Horsley. The Liberation of Christmas: The Infancy Narratives in Social
Context. Wipf &amp; Stock Publishers, reprint edition, 2006.

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                    <text>An Ancient Dreamer
From the Advent series: Songs of Liberation
Text: Isaiah 11:9; John 1:14
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
Advent I, December 7, 1997
Transcription of the spoken sermon
It is Advent again and so we march out those same familiar passages of scripture.
They are wonderful passages; we celebrate the Christian Year thus annually. We
come around the cycle and the themes surface once again, and there is a
familiarity about those prophetic scriptures and gospel lessons. In this Advent
season, we’re going to be looking at the Songs of Liberation. Subsequently, we
will be taking another look at Mary’s marvelous "Magnificat," Zachariah’s song of
delight at the birth of John the Baptist, but today, "The Ancient Dreamer," the
prophet Isaiah, who is representative of that prophetic vision that dreamed of a
world other than it is, of a different human condition, of a transformed human
society, of the kingdom of God, of Shalom on earth, of a totally transformed
human situation. We hear the prophetic words, "From the stump of Jesse,"
seemingly just a dead stump, comes a sprout, and that sprout blossoms forth and
becomes the king anointed with Spirit or a Christ, a Messiah, one who judges, not
according to appearance or what people are saying, but according to truth, who
advocates for justice, who has a concern for the poor. And not only is the whole
social situation transformed, but nature itself is transformed. The wolf and the
lamb lie down together and all of the nature red in tooth and claw is domesticated
and docile in a beautiful, harmonious totality - the Shalom of God.
The Ancient Dreamer paints the picture and, representative as he was of that
poor and oppressed people, it was the longing and the yearning for things to be
different than they were. We’re going to look at the Songs of Liberation once
again this Advent season, but this morning I’m going to dump in your laps a
problem. I want you to think about it with me in this Advent season. I’ll indicate,
perhaps, the direction in which I’m thinking, but what I really hope to accomplish
this morning is the rather modest task of confronting you, making you aware,
bringing to your consciousness a very serious problem, and it is this - the Songs
of Liberation that fill the prophetic scriptures of the Hebrew tradition and the
ballads of liberation that fill the Gospel, telling the story of the arrival of Jesus,
those songs of liberation are the songs of an underdog people. That must be
obvious. People in dire straits, people under oppression, people under systems of
domination, people in poverty, disease, hopelessness are still human. There’s
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something in the human heart that cries out against that. There’s that cry of the
Old Testament, "How long, O Lord, how long?" And so, it’s quite to be expected,
and we would find emanating from Israel, a minor people, marginalized, just a
pawn in the game of international power brokerage – it is rather obvious that that
people in the situation of poverty and destitution into which Jesus was born, it
was quite understandable that such a people should be marked by songs of
liberation. They were underdogs.
Now, here’s the problem for Advent. How do the Songs of Liberation emanating
from underdogs get appropriated by top dogs?
We love this season. It’s beautiful. We come into the sanctuary and there’s
something that touches us deeply - the music, the ritual, and so much about the
celebration of the Advent-Christmas season is very dear to us. We read the
scriptures. They are the prescribed ones, but fortunately, we don’t really hear
them, lest they ruin our celebration. Now, isn’t it true that we sort of take Advent
in our stride? We hear these songs of liberation, but we don’t really want them to
be realized, do we? Because if the songs of liberation, the ancient dreamer’s
dream, Mary’s Magnificat, Zachariah’s paeon of praise - if they were to be
realized, our world would be turned upside down. There would be such a radical
transformation of the human scene, that everything about our lives would be
changed. It’s one thing to sing that way when you’re an underdog, but it would be
foolhardy to sing that way when you’re the top dog.
Do you hear me? That’s easy enough, isn’t it? How does a top dog connect his or
her life to the yearning of the underdog?
Well, we’ve got a solution. We’ve pushed the dream out into the future, into the
world beyond, and we, in the meantime, read these stories, these ballads, sing
these songs, offer our prayers, and trust that nothing radical will happen until the
end when God will fix it all. Because I think we’re not really against God fixing it
right, just not right away. Eventually, eventually, let’s get everything straightened
out, the Golden Age of the future. That way, we can read the passages, say our
prayers, but carry on life pretty much business as usual. But you see what’s
happening? The biblical story isn’t connecting with the reality of our lives. The
biblical story has become a piece of our compartment labeled "Religion." But it is
not in touch with the everyday reality of our life and profession and business,
public life, society in general. And so we have a "Religious" compartment and it is
not in connection with where we really live. So, maybe we have to look at those
songs once again and revisit the scripture and see how it is that top dogs should
respond to the longing of underdogs.
Last September we had a Jewish-Christian Dialogue when Rabbi Hartman came
back to town, and the theme of his discussion with Father Richard John Neuhaus
was carefully selected - "The Word of God and Interpretive Communities." That
means that the Word of God always comes filtered through an interpretive
community. That means that there is no bare naked Word of God out there in the

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world. The only Word of God out in the world is the Word of God filtered through
the human receiver. And then, underneath that title, "Possibilities for SelfCorrection." That biblical tradition, that Word of God as it has come down to us
through interpretive communities - what are the possibilities for self-correction?
Well, David Hartman gave the experience of the Jewish people which I think is
very helpful. He said in the scriptures we have a couple of paradigms or models of
the relationship of God to the people. The Exodus, the founding experience of
Israel, was an experience where Israel was in bondage; they cried to God; God
moved for deliverance, and they passively received the redemption of God: God’s
unilateral movement to redeem a people. That was the Exodus model, which was
the shaper of the founding of the people Israel.
But, a little later, Moses led that people to the foot of Mount Sinai and they got
the law of God and the covenant of God, and now we hear a little different tone.
Now it’s not just God acting unilaterally, but now God invites them into
responsible covenant relationship: "I have borne you on eagles’ wings and
brought you to myself. Now, therefore, if you will hear my voice and obey my
command...." And that Sinai covenant is summarized in the Book of
Deuteronomy where we have Moses’ farewell sermons as he summarizes the
experience, and what does he say in a climactic passage in the Book of
Deuteronomy?
"Look, I have set before you life and death, blessing and curse. Choose
life, that you may live."
Israel is confronted with a responsibility to respond to God, so there came that
whole tradition in Israel of the responsibility of the leadership of the people, the
rabbis, to implement the moral law of God, the active implementation of the
moral law. When that was not implemented, when that moral law was not
followed, the prophets rose up and condemned Israel and said, "You will be
judged for this."
But, David Hartman said there was another stage. It happened in the centuries
right around Jesus, Second Temple Judaism, the Talmudic period. Then the Jews
made another move. Not only did they take responsibility for the implementation
of the law as it was written, but they became the interpreters of the law. Why did
they have to interpret the law? Well, the situation had changed. History moved
on. There were new situations, new conditions.
They had to obey God, follow God, worship God in a whole new context, and so
they developed the method of interpretation that not only said what the law said,
but now they interpreted what the law meant. That was a significant move in the
life of the Jewish people, whereas, David Hartman said, the rabbis, the biblical
scholars became, as it were, the creators of the Word of God, never starting out
with something brand new but, always working with that tradition, saying, "Now

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in this new situation, this is what the Word means, thereby becoming an
interpretive community.
But, the Jewish people still considered themselves to be in exile and the
predominant, at least orthodox, opinion among the Jewish people was that they
were scattered in exile waiting for the Messiah to come. We say that Jesus was
the Messiah. But they say that Jesus was not the Messiah. Jesus could not be the
Messiah, because, when Messiah comes, the world will be made right. And the
world is still filled with war and violence and all the rest of it. Obviously, then, the
Messiah has not come.
Well, we said the Messiah came, but he came in a little different way than we
expected and he’s going to come again and fix it up.
Now, we have the Jewish people and the Christian church both looking for the
Messiah to come - we looking for a return, they looking for the first time, because
the predominant Jewish mood was, if history is going to be changed, God is going
to have to change it through God’s anointed one, the sprout out of the stump of
Jesse.
In the 19th century there were some secular Jews, not observant anymore, who
said, "You know, we’ve really had enough of prayer and fasting. We’ve really had
enough of waiting on God. Let’s do something," and the Zionist movement was
born. The Zionist movement was an innovative movement within Judaism in
which the secular Jews for the first time took responsibility for history. They
began to say it is not enough to pray and to say, "How long, O Lord, how long?"
Let us roll up our sleeves and let us make it happen. The Zionist movement of the
19th century issued in the establishment of the Jewish homeland in the 20th
century and there is Israel today, a reality.
Now, my question to you this Advent season is whether or not that secular Zionist
movement within Judaism did not perhaps get it right, and that maybe the
Christian church ought to take a lesson and begin to implement the kingdom of
God here and now? Maybe we ought to be done with that "golden age" out in the
future which God will make happen. Maybe we ought to begin to say, "Where in
the world is the Spirit of God moving now, and how can we get in the flow of that
Spirit to realize more and more the kingdom of God, here and now, right here
and now, in this world, in this place?" Maybe in Advent we ought to catch
ourselves up short and not say, "How long, O Lord, how long?" And, "O Lord,
when will be the day of his appearing?" But maybe we ought to hear, for example,
Micah in the text of a couple weeks ago, "The Lord has showed you what is
required of you and what does the Lord require of you, but to do justly, to love
mercy, and to walk humbly with your God."
Maybe we ought to take seriously what we profess when we say the Word became
flesh. Maybe we ought to get serious about the fact that God has embodied in
human flesh the eternal intention of God - "In the beginning was the word and

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the word was with God and the word became flesh and dwelt among us," and in
the flesh of Jesus we have the embodiment of the intention of God. Maybe God is
saying, when we say, "How long, O Lord," maybe God is saying, "That’s my line!
Why are you crying to me? Haven’t I made it clear? Is it a problem that you don’t
understand? Is it a problem that the way is not there? What do you want further
from me? Why aren’t you doing something about it?"
My problem with celebrating Advent unreflectively, according to custom,
delightful though it is, is that we endanger ourselves in becoming very
hypocritical, because, you see, it seems to me that Advent prayers in the
sanctuary or the chapel ought to be not, "O God, bring in the day of your
kingdom," but rather, "O God, give me wisdom, discernment and courage to
affect your kingdom here and now." Perhaps our prayer and our worship ought to
be a time of waiting on the Lord to give us that inward strength and courage and
boldness to begin to act according to the way that clearly God has called us to act.
And what would happen if songs of liberation began to be sung, not only by the
underdogs, but by the top dogs? And is it possible that in our Western tradition
we have already all kinds of things going for us that ought not to be seen as some
secular developments, but perhaps as the beginning germination of the kingdom
of God within the course of history? We could name a lot of things. How about
the feminist movement, where a woman says, "Could you treat me as a human
being, fully human? Could I be treated equally?" What about our growing
understanding, as we have here, that sexual orientation is not a choice, but is a
part of the vast diversity of God’s creation? What would happen if you took into
your arms one who had felt the sting of rejection and felt her salty tears as she
knew for the first time she was included? Wouldn’t it be the beginning of the
kingdom of God? What about the dignity of the human person that we’ve come to
appreciate in the West? What about the democratic process, what about the
opportunity to worship God according to our conscience?
Those values are not just human values arrived at through secular speculation,
but I believe they are the consequence of the impetus of the Spirit of God in the
course of history. What if we got serious about taking those things seriously and
making them applicable in ever-widening circles? What if we got concerned as
top dogs to begin to implement the yearning of the underdogs of the world?
Wouldn’t that be something?
We don’t have to throw our world away. We don’t have to throw our freedoms
away. We don’t have to throw the economic miracle away; we don’t have to throw
our medical miracles away; we don’t have to undo what we have done. What we
have to do is to see that all that has been done has been done by grace and ought
to be implemented more and more for more and more, and then, I believe the
kingdom would be coming and then we would be less concerned about some
golden age and less imperiling our soul with hypocrisy by praying, "Lord, when is

© Grand Valley State University

�An Ancient Dreamer

Richard A. Rhem

Page 6	&#13;  

the day of Your appearing?" and we would start making something happen here
and now, and maybe for the first time be honest at Advent.
There have been secular writers who have described political reality in marvelous
terms that are somewhat comparable to the ancient dreamer, and people write
them off. They call them Utopian. And when anyone comes up with a different
idea of another world and the way it could be, they could easily be written off as
Utopian. "Aaah, it’s Utopia! Why don’t you get in the real world? Get real!" You
know what Utopia means from the Greek? Literally, no place. Utopia is no place,
and the Messianic Age is no age. The Messianic Age and the ideal of Utopia is that
critique of every moment of history and by God’s grace and by God’s Spirit, we
are the people who have the resources and the power and the vision to make it
happen. When will we begin to take responsibility for our world? There have been
some interesting things written about the sextuplets as God’s miracle. That’s not
God’s miracle, that’s a medical miracle and it has questionable qualities about it;
it’s a question of medical ethics, it’s something that human beings ought to think
about, wrestle with. God isn’t going to answer that problem.
We need to stay out of the chapel and off our knees asking God to do what God
asks us to do when He says, "Why don’t you do what you ought to be doing, have
enough knowledge to be doing, enough wisdom to be doing, if you would do it
humbly, walking with your God, conscious that life is gift and you are charged
with responsibility, but have access to the Spirit so that you could change your
world?"
That is what I’d like you to think about this week.

© Grand Valley State University

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                <text>A sermon given by Richard A. Rhem (Dick) on November 25, 1997 entitled "The Irony of Thanksgiving", on the occasion of Thanksgiving Sunday, at Christ Community Church, Spring Lake, MI. Scripture references: Deuteronomy 8:12-14, Psalm 115:6, 7, 17.</text>
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                    <text>Living Before the Face of God: Healed and Whole
From the series: Meeting God Again For the First Time
Text: Habakkuk 3:18; Luke 19:9
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
November 23, 1997
Transcription of the spoken sermon
Marcus Borg, whose book, The God We Never Knew, has provided for me the
themes of the preaching this fall, concludes the book with a chapter entitled,
"Salvation: What On Earth Do We Mean?" You know that I like language and I
like play on words and I love the way he has used an idiom in that title, for "what
on earth do we mean" is borrowing that idiom "on earth," an expression which we
use without reflection, although we know how to use it and when to use it. I heard
it in my youth most often, when my father said to me, "What on earth are you
thinking?" And we all use it with one another when there is something that we
think is out of line, something out of order, something that is being misused or
maybe some ugliness or some meanness.
"What on earth are you saying?"
"What on earth do you mean?"
"What on earth are you doing?"
It is interesting to study the derivation of idioms. I don’t know where that one
came from, but I know this - that when we use it, we don’t really mean, "What on
earth are you doing," as opposed to, "What on the moon are you doing?" or,
"What on Mars are you doing." We don’t mean anything by "on earth." It’s just an
expression that has come into our language and we use it. We know when to use
it and how to use it, and everybody understands when we do use it.
When a phrase becomes an idiom that is taken for granted, then it can be rolled
back, then it can be restored to its literal sense to make a point. And that’s exactly
what Marcus Borg does. "What on earth do we mean by salvation?" Not, "What is
salvation in terms of eternal life?" Not, "What is salvation in the religious sense in
which we usually think about it?" Marcus Borg has tried to get us to re-imagine,
to re-think, and in this final chapter he challenges us to re-think salvation or to
think again about salvation and its meaning and, as he has done throughout the
course of the book, he has sought to focus our attention here rather than there.
Now rather than then. On earth rather than in heaven.
© Grand Valley State University

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�Living Before the Face of God: Healed and Whole

Richard A. Rhem

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What on earth do we mean by salvation? In other words, what is salvation in my
present experience? What does salvation mean for the here and now, my
everyday existence? That hauls us up short, because we tend to think about
salvation as that escape that God has provided us in order to save us from
condemnation and to bring us to glory. In so doing, focus is other-worldly. It is of
another age, and far too often it has far too little content relative to the life I am
living right now. And I think that tragically we pour another-worldly content into
it, failing to stop to think in order to experience salvation on earth, now, every
day, in our ordinary days, in our ordinary life.
Salvation. The word itself reminds us of salve. Salve is a healing ointment which
we apply to wounds. Another word in that family is salvage. Salvation includes
the salvaging of our lives. Salvation, then, speaks about healing and the move
toward wholeness. The title of the sermon is "Healed and Whole," and I should
qualify that, lest I imply that salvation is some status that we achieve or some
achievement that we bring to ourselves as a finished product. Much rather, let me
say, living before the face of God, healing and moving toward wholeness, because
I believe that salvation is a process, not a product. It is that which is engaging our
existence day by day, not something that has moved us from one status to
another and guaranteed the future.
Salvation. What on earth do we mean?
I wish for a few moments you could disengage from everything you have ever
been taught, ever heard about, ever thought about salvation. These old words
become so encrusted with baggage, with nuances, connotations. And they’re so
connected with particular experiences, people and places that it is very hard for
us to break through and to think salvation in a fresh and clear manner. I know
that we can’t wash our minds of all of that which has accrued over all of our years
but, just for a moment, think with me about salvation on earth, the process of
being saved, here and now. I suspect that most of us have moments when we ask
ourselves, what on earth is my life amounting to? What on earth am I doing?
What on earth am I giving myself to? What is my life? Where am I going? What of
my life?
Most of the time we’re busy enough so that we can get off that in a hurry and we
can get on to important things like appointments and setting new goals and
allowing the drivenness of our lives and our compulsions to keep us moving, not
pausing long enough to allow those moments of serious reflection to penetrate to
the depths, just to stay and to wait long enough with the questions. What is my
life?
But, sometimes it does happen. Perhaps some of you are experiencing those
questions this morning. Maybe a medical diagnosis, a loss of employment, a loss
of a loved one. Maybe just a boredom of ordinary days. And then there is that
pause and that question.

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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I suspect something like that was going on with Zacchaeus. We don’t know, but
we are told that he was a chief tax collector, and that he was rich. So, externally, I
suppose we would say Zacchaeus was doing all right. Of course, he had joined the
enemy. He became an agent of the oppressing power; he was in the upper
echelons of the tax bureaucracy and everyone hates tax people. And so, he had to
make a decision. He could live, apparently, with the rejection of his fellow Jews,
his countrymen. But something was going on. Something was eating at him.
Maybe it was just that Zacchaeus no longer really liked Zacchaeus. We know
something was going on because Zacchaeus scrapped his dignity and scrambled
up a sycamore tree in order to get a glimpse of Jesus who was going to pass that
way.
The reputation of Jesus had preceded him. He was a person known for healing;
he was a charismatic personality; he seemed to move multitudes and he had been
an agent of the transformation of people’s lives, and I suspect that Zacchaeus was
there on more than a celebrity hunt. I’m sure there were many who crowded
around to see this person, but I suspect that anybody who goes to the measures
that Zacchaeus goes to had something deeper in mind, and he must have been
totally shocked to get the invitation of Jesus, who invited himself to Zacchaeus’
home. We’re not told a lot about it, except that Zacchaeus seemed to experience a
total transformation, giving away half of what he earned, and being willing to
restore fourfold to anyone whom he had defrauded. The story is just a little
vignette, and the details aren’t there, but we can imagine something going on - a
person suddenly stops to say, "What is my life? What on earth am I doing?", who
encounters Jesus, drawing forth from Jesus the comment at the end, "Today
salvation has come to this home."
Salvation. Jesus didn’t say that Zacchaeus had been outside of the covenant and
now came in. Indeed, he says he, too, is a child of the covenant. He, too, is a son
of Abraham. No, it was something else that was going on internally with
Zacchaeus. Maybe it was the dignity and the respect that Jesus accorded him, he
being so used to being despised and rejected of all humankind. I can imagine
that, when Jesus saw that little fellow up in the tree, called him down, watched
him scramble, Jesus probably fell in love with him right there, maybe had a good
bellylaugh. Maybe it was just that genuine human encounter, just the sense that
someone looked at Zacchaeus as a human being, accorded him some dignity,
some person-to-person reality that turned him inside out, transformed him.
Jesus said that that was salvation. Jesus didn’t say a lot about repentance and
faith and all of the stuff that we’ve barnacled that term up with. Jesus met a
person and somehow or other must have said through body language or real
language, "Zacchaeus, you are accepted." And Zacchaeus was changed forever.
I love the description of grace that we have on the cover of your bulletin. It’s by
Paul Tillich and I have never found anything that I think says it any better. I see
Zacchaeus in those opening lines. Tillich says,

© Grand Valley State University

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Richard A. Rhem

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The experience of grace strikes us when our disgust for our own being, our
indifference, our weakness, our hostility and our lack of direction and
composure have become intolerable to us. It strikes us when, year after
year, the longed for perfection of life does not appear, when the old
compulsions reign within us as they have for decades, when despair
destroys all joy and courage.
I wonder if that’s not what was going on with Zacchaeus, if that’s not what made
him scurry up the sycamore tree. Can you identify with some of this? Those
moments of reflection when we pause long enough to look ourselves in the mirror
and what we see causes us to say, "What on earth am I doing? What on earth am I
giving my life to? Who am I, anyway?" Tillich says it can happen at a moment like
that. Maybe grace is experienced at a moment of encounter such as Zacchaeus
and Jesus when
... a wave of light breaks into our darkness, and it is as though a voice were
saying, You are accepted. You are accepted, accepted by that which is
greater than you and the name of which you do not know.
Tillich says, if it ever happens to you,
... Do not ask for the name now; perhaps you will find it later. Do not try to
do anything now; perhaps later you will do much. Do not seek for
anything; do not perform anything; do not intend anything. Simply accept
the fact that you are accepted! If that happens to us, we experience grace.
You see, he belabors the point because the whole gospel of Jesus Christ has been
associated with the religion of performance. We can talk about grace until we are
blue in the face, but it always brings with it all of the trappings of religion that
involve repentance and obedience and performance and that God Who is the
monarch, the all-glorious king afar off, the God Who is the offended deity, Who,
to be sure, loves us and has provided a way for the embrace, nonetheless is a God
before Whom to be honest we cower because we know we can never measure up.
So, Tillich says if there is ever such a golden moment in your life, just sit still, just
wait, soak it in, absorb it. Don’t try to do anything. Don’t try to figure it out. Don’t
intend anything; don’t perform anything; just let it soak in and accept it. I’m
accepted. Just accept your acceptance!
That must have been the experience of Zacchaeus, and it is really so simple
because, you see, the gospel of Jesus Christ would not be good news if it brought
with it some demand on our part, some performance, something we have to
believe. How can you believe what you don’t believe? If you believe, it is a gift.
Faith is a gift, not something you can generate within yourself, some path of
performance. Well, that, too, is grace, the expression of our lives, the genuine,
authentic expression of who we are. Grace is precisely that - it is the acceptance of
who we are.

© Grand Valley State University

�Living Before the Face of God: Healed and Whole

Richard A. Rhem

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Evangelism is not going into all the world and telling the story that can get a
response from people. Evangelism, good news, evangel is to go into all the world
and tell the whole world what is already true, what has been always true, eternally
true, and will be eternally true. It is the proclamation, not of what we ought to as
human beings do for God, but it is the proclamation of what God has done.
If we could just accept it. And it is simple. You are accepted! You are accepted.
There’s nothing you can do about it. You can never get away from it; it will
embrace you, it will chase you. You cannot flee the presence of grace because God
is not some monarch afar off, offended, our adversary, our enemy, someone to be
appeased and propitiated. God is the one in whom we live and move and have our
being, the one who embraces these children at the baptismal font, who passively
receives, who goes with us through all our days and will be there at our end; the
One Who heard our borning cry and at the end has one more surprise. If you
could just accept it - you are accepted! And if you can hear it, then you still may
get into dismay and confusion as Habakkuk when the enemy’s at the door and
disaster looms on the horizon, and you may cry to God and you’ll hear the words
that Habakkuk heard, "The just shall live by faith or by faithfulness."
In other words, trust, trust, trust that you are accepted. Trust. And if you hear it,
then you say, "Okay, okay. So the olive crop fails, no herds in the field, no cattle in
the stall. Strip me naked. Lay me bare, and still I will rejoice in God my salvation,
my salve, my salvager, the One who doesn’t loom on the other side of eternity
waiting to check me in, the moral policeman, the gatekeeper."
No, God is here now, trying to get through to us, "You are accepted. You are
accepted. You are accepted." And if ever once the soul is seared with the burning,
branding iron of grace, then nothing will shake us, nothing will move us, for we
have learned in the inner corpuscles of our being that all is grace and all will be
well, and that’s all there is to it, and that is what on earth we mean by salvation,
and heaven will take care of itself!
Reference:
Marcus Borg. The God We Never Knew: Beyond Dogmatic Religion to a more
Authentic Contemporary Faith. HarperOne, 1998.
Paul Tillich, “You Are Accepted,” Chapter 19, The Shaking of the Foundations.
Charles Scribner &amp; Sons, 1955.

© Grand Valley State University

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                <text>A sermon given by Richard A. Rhem (Dick) on November 23, 1997 entitled "Living Before the Face of God: Healed and Whole", as part of the series "Meeting God Again for the First Time", on the occasion of Pentecost XXVII, at Christ Community Church, Spring Lake, MI. Scripture references: Habakkuk 3:18, Luke 19:9.</text>
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                    <text>Living Before the Face of God: The Social Dimension
From the series: Meeting God Again For the First Time
Text: Micah 6:8; Matthew 6:10
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
November 16, 1997
Transcription of the spoken sermon
I pulled a book from my shelves this week. It had been there for a long time. I
always knew it was there, but I had never read it. I purchased it in the early 70's.
It was published in 1970. To show you how ancient it is, it cost me $1.25. I pulled
it down now because of its title, its title which I thought might have something of
interest to say to the theme of this morning’s message, which is, "Living Before
the Face of God: The Social Dimension." The title of that book is The Politics of
God, and I smiled to myself as I realized that, from the time I came into the
ministry until the present, I’ve done a 180° turn. When I came into the ministry, I
was strictly warned not to bring politics into the pulpit. In fact, we all know that
in polite conversation one is not to speak of religion or politics. In preaching it’s a
little difficult not to speak about religion, although some do it successfully. But,
politics – derived from the Greek word, polis, which means city – I’ve come to
see, has everything to do with the biblical tradition on which we stand. The faith
of Israel, which came to expression in Jesus, is from beginning to end very
political in terms of its concerns for the polis, the city, or, extended, for the
human community. The wellbeing of the human community is of extreme
concern to the God of Israel, to the God Who comes to expression in Jesus Christ.
One cannot be faithful to the biblical tradition without taking seriously the social
dimension. It is there from beginning to end.
While we ought never to neglect the personal dimension, as we said last week, it
is the social dimension that is by far the major theme of the biblical tradition, and
it is interesting to me that I could have missed that in all of my years of training
and the early years of my ministry. But there are two ways to avoid that social
dimension. I pursued the first way in the early years of my ministry. That is the
way that is represented in the question – listen to the question, see if you
recognize the question – "Where will you spend eternity?"
Now, for one thing, that’s a question addressed to an individual and, secondly, it’s
a question that takes the focus off the present and this world and focuses it on the
world to come. I was very good at that. Most of you are happy you never knew
me. I would have been trying to get you saved. Not so much to make your life
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good here now, but to get you secured for eternal life in heaven. That was my
focus. I didn’t understand anything else. I thought that’s what it was all about.
In the more recent decades, the social dimension of the biblical tradition has
been avoided by an equally individualistic approach, but this time, the approach
of self-fulfillment or peace of mind. It’s a focus on me and my comfortable
adjustment in life. There was a very acute sociological analysis of American
society published in 1985 called Habits of the Heart and, in that analysis of
American society, American society was characterized by the phrase, "The
therapeutic society." Not therapy in the sense of the clinical technique that deals
with emotional or psychic disorder, but therapy in the sense of enabling us to be
adjusted in our environment, in our situations. Now, there’s nothing really wrong
with that, except to reduce the function of religion to be an agent for my personal
adjustment is hardly worthy of the religious traditions that have marked the
human family down through the centuries.
But, in either case – whether the focus is on the individual to bring that person to
personal salvation for eternal security in heaven, or whether it is on the
individual to create peace of mind and self-realization here and now - what is
missed is that social dimension which is in the scriptures from the beginning.
Israel was born in a liberation movement. The founding event of Israel was the
Exodus, and in those opening chapters of Exodus, you remember that the God of
Israel was one who was understood to hear the cries of the people. It is stated in
those opening chapters: the cries of my people have come to me, and God calls
Moses to lead those slaves out of Egyptian bondage.
Walter Brueggemann speaks about the royal consciousness of Egypt that had a
totalitarian grip on the people who were held in oppressive economic
exploitation. And that regime was legitimated by the royal priesthood. Israel
moved out of that situation of slavery and into its own land and, for a couple of
hundred years, lived under what we could describe as a theocracy. God was king.
No more of that human monarch on the throne that led to oppression. But
memory is short, and before long there was that debate within Israel. There were
those voices saying we want to be like other nations. We need a king. And Samuel
warned Israel about the implications of establishing a monarchy. But,
nonetheless, it was established. And it went not so poorly with Saul and quite well
with David, but you remember Solomon whose oppressive public works projects
threw the people into servitude again, with economic exploitation and political
oppression. It was a domination system all over again.
But there was one thing that saved Israel from being just like all the other
nations, because, with the rise of monarchy, came the voice of prophecy. If I were
to name what gift Israel has given to the world, it would be that prophetic voice,
that prophetic voice endowed with the spirit of God that had the courage to speak
truth to power. That is the prophetic function and, in Israel’s history, that which

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shaped it, made it unique was that prophetic voice that was always addressed to
those who abused the people.
I could have chosen most any prophet. I could have chosen passage after passage
to illustrate what I am trying to say this morning, but I felt that Micah’s language
was so descriptive as he addresses the leaders of Israel, addressing those who are
responsible for the political and religious leadership of the nation.
"You hate good and love evil. You tear the skin off my people and the flesh
off their bones. You eat the flesh of my people, flay their skin off them,
break their bones in pieces, chop them up like meat in a kettle, like flesh in
a cauldron."
He goes on to excoriate the prophets who play for pay, who have a word of peace
for those who can pay, but no word at all for those who don’t put something in
their mouth. He criticizes the priesthood which carries on an empty ritual,
legitimizing a regime that is full of injustice, lacking all compassion. And then in
his conclusion, he says,
"Because of this terrible oppression of the vast majority of the people, Zion
will be like a plowed field and Jerusalem shall become a heap of ruins."
Well, there are those who say, "Well, what should we do? Would the Lord like
1,000 calves, 10,000 rivers of oil? Shall I give my firstborn, the fruit of my body?
Would this please the Lord?" To which the prophet says,
"Look, you know what the Lord requires - to do justice, to love kindness,
and to walk humbly with your God. It isn’t that difficult."
This was the prophetic description for a society marked by justice and
compassion. That prophetic voice came to expression again in Jesus. Over against
that politics of exclusion through temple rites and holiness and being the right
kind of people, Jesus countered with a politic of compassion. We sang together
the Lord’s Prayer in which Jesus was teaching his disciples to pray and in which
we have the words,"Thy kingdom come." In other words, your rule prevail. Thy
will be done on earth as it is in heaven. The focus is here and now. Thy will be
done, here and now, as it is in heaven. The Sermon on the Mount, in which the
Lord’s Prayer appears, also has the Golden Rule, which wasn’t original with Jesus
and has come to expression in several different forms. But, as a matter of fact, it
still is very much at the heart of the social concern, albeit in that more personal
relationship: Do unto others, as you would have them do unto you. And the very
statement is in marked contrast to the rather flippant attitude of so much of
contemporary society symbolized in a bumper sticker I saw recently which said,
in Old English print, "Do Unto Others and Split." Jesus, in the tradition of the
Hebrew prophets, called for a politics of compassion and embodied in his
ministry, in his table fellowship, in his openness to all, that access to the grace of
God and that embrace by God of all people. And it was in his challenge to that

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established authority, reflecting very much the established authority of Micah’s
day although without a reigning monarch, that Jesus was crucified.
Someone has said that there were three times when the justice and compassion
which God wills for society had been rejected - one time in the Hebrew
monarchy, a second time in the ministry of Jesus, and then a third time when the
emperor Constantine established the Christian faith. That establishment of the
Christian faith by Constantine has often been characterized as the conquering of
the empire by the Gospel, but has turned out in all truth to be the co-opting of the
Gospel by the empire, because from 313 on, with the legitimization of the
Christian faith, throne and altar once again came together. The throne created
space for the altar and the altar legitimated the throne. Just as the kings of Israel
had their retinue of prophets and priests who were paid to speak the party line
and to speak no other line, just so the temptation of the church has been to
baptize the regime rather than to stand over against it, in the name of the God of
Israel, in the name of Jesus, and to say human community is to be structured
other than the way it is.
Well, what are we to do about it? It is such a massive problem. Are you aware that
our world, our society, our global society and even particularly our American
society are in a state of crisis, and that the crisis is not really a crisis of abortion or
sexual orientation or crime on the streets? The crisis is rather the structures and
the systems by which our societies are shaped and formed, the way in which they
function. We are coming to see rather lately that the problem with the failure of
human community is a systemic problem. It is not that there are not a lot of
people of good will. It is not that there are not a lot of people who are trying to do
good things. It is that the very way in which our systems, political and economic,
are structured continue to exacerbate the problem rather than move us toward
world community. In our own country, just to cite one facet of the crisis, there is a
growing gulf between the rich and the poor. Let me give you some statistics, just
to help you take that in. During the 1980s, 90% of the total increase in income
went to the wealthiest 20% of the population. The remaining 10% of the increase
was spread over 90% of the people. Obviously, that has to lead to the growing gulf
between the rich and the poor. In 1963, the ratio of CEO salaries to average
worker salaries in the same company was 41 to 1. Now, being the local CEO, I
think that’s fair. 41 to 1. That was 1963. You know what it is now? 225 to 1. You
know what it is in Germany right now? 20 to 1.
In 1963, the wealthiest one percent of families owned 23% of the wealth in terms
of homes and cars and stocks and savings. The wealthiest one percent owned
23%. In 1994, the wealthiest one percent owned 44%. In the U.S., the ratio of
annual income received by the top 10% of the population compared to the bottom
10% is 6 to 1. For comparison purposes, in Finland it’s just over 2 to 1, in France,
2 ½ to 1, in Germany and the United Kingdom, 3 to 1. These statistics simply
point to an inevitable growth in the gap between those who possess and those
who lack. It is a trend. That’s the direction in which it’s moving. But those

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particular statistics are only signs of something that can be seen in the social
structures. Education, for example, is lacking severely in poor areas of urban
blight, but is doing well in fortunate areas like ours. And yet, even here one
doesn’t have to scratch too hard to find a begrudging of that which is the future of
society.
In those areas where wealth abounds, there are growing gated communities.
Now, I like gated communities. I like to feel safe and secure behind those walls, to
know that there is a guardhouse and a guard. And one can understand the growth
in gated communities among the wealthy because there is so much crime and
violence in society, and crime seems everywhere and out of control, and the need
to build more prisons and to gain more prison beds is in the news all the time.
Might we ask, might we ask why? Are American people simply more prone to
crime? Or is there something in the social situation of our own country and our
own time that is exacerbating that move to crime and violence? Are we so inured
with the American dream? Are we so shaped by a consumerism culture that,
failing to realize it, we turn violent? And is it possible that there can be human
community where there is more crime on the street and more gated
communities? We will not be able to survive that way. There is no human
community that way. If you take God out of the equation, if you take human
decency out of the equation, it is simply this, that any world that has people who
have nothing to lose is a dangerous world. It cannot be a world of human
community. It is simply a practical matter, of wisdom, even apart from God, even
apart from the God of Israel, even apart from the way of Jesus, even apart from
just plain human decency as we have been shaped by the biblical tradition.
It is not an easy matter to address. I am not an economist. I am not a sociologist,
and you must be tired of blustering rhetoric from the pulpit that would lay a layer
of guilt in order to execute better performance. That’s not what this is about. It is
extremely complex. It is a global problem. But, do you sense that it is a very real
crisis in our world, and would anyone refute the fact that it is a central biblical
concern and therefore that about which we must be concerned? Is it not true, as
the followers of Jesus in the tradition of the God of Israel, that domination
systems, economic exploitation and political oppression, poverty, hunger, people
living below a subsistence level where there is nothing but hopelessness and
despair - is that not something about which our souls should be wrenched?
I was criticized after the first sermon because all I tried to do was raise the
consciousness, whereas it was claimed I should have a passionate appeal to do
something. Well, I’m not sure that it’s my responsibility to solve the problem.
Why is it any more my responsibility to put the new system together than yours?
Aren’t we in this together? There are those of you with greater expertise than me.
And together, in community, if we are concerned about it, then ought we not to
be putting our creative heads together and our creative caring, passionate souls
together to say, "How in the world can we make this a more humane world?"

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What would happen if we took our PAC money, Political Action Committee
money, and pooled it and stormed Lansing and Washington and buttonholed our
legislators and even greased their campaign fund a little and said to them, "What
are you doing for the least of these, my brothers and sisters?" Rather than make
sure you vote correctly on that amendment that will create a tax loophole so I can
give more to Christ Community? You see, you don’t need a guilt-inflicting sermon
from a preacher without expertise as to how to solve the thing.
Hear me. Hear me. There is a social dimension to our faith and together we must
address those structural, systemic problems that make for multitudes of
humankind a human existence less than fully human. God cares, and we must
care, too.

© Grand Valley State University

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                <text>A sermon given by Richard A. Rhem (Dick) on November 16, 1997 entitled "Living Before the Face of God: The Social Dimension", as part of the series "Meeting God Again for the First Time", on the occasion of Pentecost XXVI, at Christ Community Church, Spring Lake, MI. Scripture references: Micah 6:8, Matthew 6:10.</text>
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                    <text>Living Before the Face of God: The Personal Dimension
From the series: Meeting God Again For the First Time
Text: Genesis 3:10; Psalm 130:1, 4; Psalm 132:1; Philippians 3:12
Richard A. Rhem
Christ Community Church
Spring Lake, Michigan
November 9, 1997
Transcription of the spoken sermon
About three weeks ago, our house began to tremble and a check out the window
revealed that, down the driveway next door just south of us, lumbered a great big
Cat, some kind of heavy equipment. It had a steel arm that seemed two stories
high that came, finally, to an iron jaw. The next morning the engine roared, the
Cat positioned itself in front of the home that had sat next to ours as long as we
had been there. The arm went up, the jaw came down on the flat-roofed dwelling
and punctured through it, here, there, in another place – through that roof like it
was nothing but tar paper. And then the arm raised up and the jaw moved over
and down to the side and simply nudged the wall in and another wall in and
another wall in, and before one knew it, that which had been a home in which to
dwell was lying in fractured rubble on the basement floor. And then those jaws
reached down and hungrily grasped all of the shattered fragments, lifting them
up and depositing them in a dump truck that was waiting. Once all of the rubble
was out of that floor, once again the arm rose up and moved over to the side of
that poured concrete wall and just went, "Poof, poof, poof," and then crrrunched
those slabs of concrete until again the jaws could come down and pick up the
pieces and put them also in the truck and, within a day’s time, where a dwelling
had been there was now simply a vacant lot, a sandbox.
Demolition. Deconstruction. Dramatic. Changing the landscape. Not just for the
fun of it, but in order that in that place there might rise a new dwelling, to the end
that my tax appraisal will go up.
Deconstruction, demolition is a part of the human experience in order that there
might be reconstruction, new construction. An old and inadequate dwelling was
demolished in order that a new house might arise more adequate to the moment,
to the time, to the person. And, as I experienced that event, I saw an analogy of
my ministry, a ministry of deconstruction, perhaps even demolition – I hope not
with the brutality of that iron Cat. Nonetheless, for the same purpose.
The analogy breaks down at one point. In the case of the house, there was total
demolition, total clearing of the space before the new construction could begin. In
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Richard A. Rhem

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the case of my teaching and preaching ministry, it is necessary, obviously, that
there be deconstruction and, simultaneously, construction, that there be
dismantling and, at the same time, mantling anew, lest we be left for a time with
no place to dwell. But, the purpose is the same, and the deconstruction and the
dismantling that must always take place in terms of our faith dwelling is not in
order to demolish, but to clear the space for something new and more adequate
to our ongoing knowledge and human experience.
It has always been that way in the faith journey of the people of God. Jesus stood
in the line of the Hebrew prophets. Jesus was born a Jew and died a Jew. His
devotion, his worship, his communion with God was within the parameters of his
Jewish experience. But he reached into that structured religious establishment
and rearranged some rooms and created some new spaces, challenging the
conventional wisdom that had moved God afar off. He brought God near, the
unbrokered presence of the God Who was accessible to all. And, of course, he
paid for it with his life.
It was the same throughout 2000 years of church history, but perhaps nowhere
more dramatically than in the 16th century. We are the children of the
Reformation, that disruptive event in the life of the church that tragically tore
asunder the body of Christ, and yet necessarily dismantled and deconstructed an
institution that had become overlain with forms and structures that blocked and
hindered and obstructed the flow of the grace of God rather than aiding that flow.
It must have been difficult for people in the 16th century, at the time itself. I think,
for example, of those who came to the altar for the bread and the cup, believing
that when the bell sounded at the altar and the priest invoked the spirit of God
there was a miracle that occurred, the transubstantiation of the bread and the
wine into body and blood, literally. Martin Luther had a hard time moving away
from that. His fine distinction was that the bread remains bread and the wine
remains wine, but the body is above and around and under the physical element
that doesn’t change. Similarly with the cup, so that over against the
transubstantiation of the Roman church, the Lutheran tradition had
consubstantiation, con, that prefix that means "with." The body was with the
bread; the blood was with the cup. I suppose there were those who were troubled
when John Calvin suggested that it is neither transubstantiation nor
consubstantiation, but rather that Christ is present spiritually when one receives
bread and cup with faith.
I suppose there were those who brought their children to the baptismal font and
got the baptism executed and breathed a sigh of relief because the Catholic
tradition taught that the child was born with original sin and that in the
baptismal act, the grace of God removed the original sin and gave the child a
fresh possibility, a new start, a start for the first time, as it were. I suppose there
were those who were troubled when they brought their child to the baptismal font
in Geneva, only to learn that there was no automatic grace attached to the act, for

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Richard A. Rhem

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the sacramentarian conception of things had been altered to where it was now the
prayer and the faith that engaged the promise and brought the grace, but without
that automatic guarantee.
Throughout the history of the church, as human knowledge has expanded and
human experience has grown, and reflection on the faith has continued, there has
been that ongoing deconstruction, not in order to leave us naked and bare, but in
order to clothe us anew with that which is more adequate, which is in accord with
the broader spectrum of our human experience, so that one need not check one’s
mind at the door and come in for mindless ritual or devotion but, rather, that one
with mind and heart according well might offer one’s whole being to God.
In these fall weeks we are re-imagining God, not simply because new is better or
old is no longer valid in every case, but in order that we might meet God again for
the first time, in order that we might have a fresh experience of the living God, a
taste of new wine, that we might experience the presence of God, the
illumination, the light of God on our total experience in a whole new way in order
that it might be deeper and richer, in order that it might engage our whole being
and our life of worship and our life generally might flow out of a center within us
that is whole, in order that there might be cohesiveness in our life.
Living before the face of God - that’s the purpose. That’s the end of our thinking
and our rethinking. Our thinking and our rethinking are vitally important, but
are always a step removed from what really matters. What really matters is the
communion of the soul with God. What really matters is that we might live with
that peace of God within us, that we might live with a kind of confidence and
strength and serenity in the conscious awareness of the presence of God in whom
we live and move and have our being.
Sometimes it’s necessary to deconstruct some of our images and some of our
systems and doctrines, because they become blocks. They no longer fit with that
which we experience otherwise. They no longer illumine our lives, but they
become, if they can be continued, just rote exercises that we do out of custom or
superstition, rather than that which we do thoughtfully, with awareness, with
attentiveness. Finally, all that we do here together is only for one purpose - that
we might live before the face of God in a relationship that is personal.
Let us be clear about that. What we are engaged in here week after week is
sometimes a matter of deconstructing, but never as an end in itself, but always to
aid and abet that living, personal relationship with God which is at the heart and
center of our religion. The function of religion is the hatching of the heart; it is
the opening of the self to the sense of the sacred, to the holy, to God. And in order
to make that accessible, available, in order to create the environment, the setting
in which that may happen, we stammer and stumble and we re-imagine,
sometimes involving dismantling, but always in order to be mantled afresh with a
sense of the gracious, living God.

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The images we carry of God, as we have noted, are terribly important. That
Genesis story pictures the Garden of Eden, that blissful place in which the human
persons are placed, protected, innocent, and unaware. The image of God in that
old Hebrew myth which is so profound in portraying our human experience, our
relationship with God, conveys the image of a God Who comes into the garden
from outside, Whose very presence brings with it fear and guilt to the human
person who has engaged in that inevitable human act of wondering,
experimenting.
The church, I think, has missed the point of that garden scene, particularly
through the interpretation of St. Paul. The experience of experimentation, that
transgression, the coloring outside of the lines is called "the Fall." As a matter of
fact, there is part of the liturgy of the church that recognizes that there was
something more going on there. It is called The Paradox of the Fortunate Fall,
because obviously that which evolved in the human being following that
transgression was gain along with the pain. There was that inquisitiveness that
brought knowledge and awareness and fear and guilt. There is in that story a
reflection of that which is endemic to the human person, a sense of fear and guilt,
a sense of treading over boundaries. Dwelling east of Eden now involves
alienation and estrangement. Yet, who could say that they should have stayed
within Eden in that innocent unawareness?
In the Hebrew tradition, the images of God were churned as they wrestled with
the concrete experience of their life in the presence of this Creator God Who
could only be conceived of as sovereign lord and king in a hierarchical society
that was structured from the top down. Yet, there was also a sense of the grace of
God. The Psalmist, in Psalm 130, speaks out of the depths. Have you ever been in
the depths? Have you ever had to cry out of the depths?
Out of the depths I cry to you, O God. O God, if you should mark iniquity,
who could stand? But with you there is forgiveness, that you may be
feared.
And the forgiveness creates hope and newness.
Here we have one model, one experience, but the experience of a personal
relationship with God, the sense that there is a grace that embraces even the one
who in the depths, in the crisis, feels estranged, alienated.
The next Psalm is a poem of serenity out of creaturely humility, the human
person being what the human person ought to be, not lifting up the eyes, not
raising the sights too high, not haughty of spirit, and consequently, in that
acceptance of the human condition, experiencing the presence of God as a child
nursing at the mother’s breast. "O God, my soul is serene." Serenity through the
awareness of God Who is Creator and I a creature.

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But, there are also people like Paul whose lives are going down the road one way
and who have an experience, cataclysmic and dramatic that turns them around in
their tracks and, whatever that vision of Jesus involved, it issued in the
transformation of Paul’s life. Was it for him also a moment of awareness? Did he
suddenly see everything in a moment? What he saw clearly was that religious
structures are transcended in that kind of experience. His wrath was raised when
religious people came in after him, into the communities that he had formed, like
the community in Philippi, with "religion." He calls them dogs; "Beware of the
dogs, the mutilators of the flesh."
Paul has been pictured in a thousand sermons as a classic case of conversion,
obviously from Judaism to Christianity. It’s just not so. Paul in the 3rd chapter of
Philippians denigrates not at all his Jewish experience. It was a very positive
experience. It was a very adequate experience. It had the potential for mediating
to Paul the God of Israel. But that mystical encounter which he had, relativized it,
until he came to see, not Christianity, but the possibility, the experience of the
reality of the communion of the soul with God. He was born a Jew and he died a
Jew. He would never have sensed himself to be anything else, but I think he
would have said, "It’s not so important that I’m a Jew anymore," and I don’t think
he had the foggiest idea that he would be the founder of Christianity, which he
was. Jesus didn’t found Christianity. Paul did. But he would have said the form
doesn’t matter, because religion is not a ritual form or a doctrinal system.
The experience of God transcends religious ritual and doctrine. All is transcended
in the communion of the soul with God. Once the soul has been indelibly marked,
when it has been seared with the seal of the presence of God, the reality of God,
then all religious form and structure is relativized. Then use it or put it aside. But
know that, in a moment of awareness, the presence, the embrace, the
undergirding, the overshadowing of God – of the sacred and the holy that
permeates the whole of reality – sustains, succors and nurtures and nourishes us.
So, where are you? That was God’s question to that first couple cowering in the
bushes. "Where are you?"
"Hiding."
"Why are you hiding?"
"Well, we decided to be human."
God knows our frame. God remembers that we are human. God made us that
way. God didn’t create this whole vast cosmos and all the myriad millions of
humankind in order with a blast of God’s breath to damn it all. God is the One in
whom we live and move and have our being, who says, "Where are you?"
Why don’t you just stop for a moment, for just for a moment. You could become
aware, if you could just hear you are loved. If you could just break through as

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Richard A. Rhem

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Paul broke through and finally see that, if God is for us, who could be against us?
That there is nothing in life or death or principalities or powers or things present
or things to come, nothing in the heights or the depths, nothing in all creation
that could ever separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus. If for just a
moment you could become aware, it would transform us forever and enable us to
rest from our restlessness and be reborn with an energy that, with the Apostle
Paul, we would say, "I press on with joy, seeking to grasp that which has grasped
me."

© Grand Valley State University

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            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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                <text>eng</text>
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            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="459224">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="459225">
                <text>Sound</text>
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            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="459227">
                <text>audio/mp3</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="794450">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>A sermon given by Richard A. Rhem (Dick) on November 9, 1997 entitled "Living Before the Face of God: The Personal Dimension", as part of the series "Meeting God Again for the First Time", on the occasion of Pentecost XXV, at Christ Community Church, Spring Lake, MI. Scripture references: Genesis 3:10, Psalm 130:1, 4, Psalm 132:1, Phil. 3:12.</text>
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        <name>Faith Journey</name>
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      <tag tagId="19">
        <name>Grace</name>
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      <tag tagId="334">
        <name>History of Church</name>
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      <tag tagId="227">
        <name>Re-imagining the Faith</name>
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    </tagContainer>
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