Sermons and thoughts on faith on Scripture from my time at Old Presbyterian Meeting House and Falls Church Presbyterian Church, plus sermons and postings from "Pastor James," my blog while pastor at Boulevard Presbyterian in Columbus, OH.
Tuesday, November 27, 2018
Sunday, November 25, 2018
Sermon: Belonging to the Truth
John 18:33-37
Belonging to the Truth
James Sledge November
25, 2018
“For this I was born, and for this I came into the
world, to testify to the truth. Everyone who belongs to the truth listens to my
voice." That
is how Jesus responds to Pilate’s question about whether or not he is a king.
But Pilate is not much interested in truth. In the verse that follows our
reading, Pilate responds, “What is truth?”
I
think perhaps Pilate would fit right into our world of “alternative facts,” of
“truth isn’t truth,” as Rudy Giuliani famously claimed. Pilate is a politician,
and truth is often a problem for politicians. It has a nasty habit of getting
in the way of plans and agendas, and so it often becomes casualty in election
campaigns or political debates.
The
gospel of John, more so than any other, portrays Pilate as a tragic figure,
invited by Jesus into the truth but unable to enter. Pilate must scurry back
and forth between the Jewish leaders outside and Jesus inside. He thinks he has
power and control, but it is an illusion.
In
our reading, Pilate comes inside after speaking with those leaders. He attempts
to question Jesus, asking if he is King of the Jews. But rather than answer,
Jesus questions him. “Do you ask this on your own, or did others
tell you about me?” Pilate does not answer, but the question seems to
have stung him. “I am not a Jew, am I?” he objects.
Now
I need to pause here to clarify something about this word, “Jew.” The writer of
John’s gospel is a Jew who follows Jesus. He writes to a congregation of Jews
who follow Jesus and worship at the synagogue. Most of the time in John’s
gospel, the term Jew refers, not to people who are Jewish, but to the Jewish
leadership that opposed Jesus and is threatening to kick this congregation of
Jewish, Jesus followers out of the synagogue. One of the great tragedies of
history was the failure of later Christians to recognize this, and then to use
the gospel of John as a weapon against their Jewish neighbors.
And
so when Pilate insists that he is not a Jew – in the Greek, his question is not
really a question – he is insisting that he is not like those Jewish leaders
who stand in the way of what God is doing, or as Jesus describes it, those who
do not belong to the truth.
It’s
not that Pilate doesn’t know the truth. He knows that Jesus is innocent, but
there are other things that matter more to Pilate than the truth. Jerusalem was
hardly a prime posting for a Roman official, and no doubt Pilate wanted things
to go smoothly there. No riots during the Passover festival on his watch. If an
innocent man needed to die in order for things to stay calm, so be it. Never
mind the truth.
Wednesday, November 21, 2018
Monday, November 19, 2018
Sermon: Faithful Lament
1 Samuel 1:4-20; 2:1-10
Faithful Lament
James Sledge November
18, 2018
In
the wake of the horrific murders at a Pittsburgh synagogue, there have been
many articles written about the rise in anti-Semitism and racism. Not so many
years ago, people talked about moving into a post racial society. That seems
naïve foolishness now. Recently I read an article in the Post that talked about how young Jews find themselves confronted
with a reality they thought belonged to a distant past.
For many young Jews across the nation, last month’s mass shooting at Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh was a jarring lesson. Many millennials who grew up hearing about anti-Semitism from their parents and grandparents think of the Holocaust, Eastern European pogroms and the Spanish Inquisition when they think about violence against Jews — stories they read in history books about events that happened well over half a century ago, and all in the old country, not the United States.The Pittsburgh rampage, committed by a gunman who reportedly shouted “All Jews must die” as he fired, shattered what remained of that illusion.[1]
I
rather doubt that black, millennial Americans ever shared such an illusion.
Hate and violence against African Americans never was an old country problem relegated
to history books. Still, the mainstreaming of racism in recent years, including
its blatant use as political strategy, feels like a huge step backwards. And
those who had hoped in some sort of inexorable progress toward a day when
racism, anti-Semitism, homophobia, and so on were confined to history may now find
such hope in short supply.
I
confess that the last few years have at times left me struggling. When I talk
with other clergy types about how they and their folks and managing, I hear of
two very different responses. One sounds like the joke Stephen Colbert tells regarding
Donald Trump’s claim to have done more for religion than any other president. “It’s
true,” says Colbert. I’ve prayed more in the last two years than I ever have.”
But others have respond differently, struggling to pray at all because of anger
or despair. Me, I’ve gone back and forth between these two.
Tuesday, November 6, 2018
Sunday, November 4, 2018
Sermon: Big Rocks First
Mark 12:28-34
Big Rocks First
James Sledge November
4, 2018
As
seminary student, I did my summer internship at a small town church in eastern
North Carolina. They provided housing for me in a mother-in-law suite attached
to the home of a widowed, Jewish grandmother named Reba. As far as I know, Reba,
her son, and his family constituted the entire Jewish population of that town.
Reba’s
house and my suite shared an enclosed porch, and she and I would sometimes sit
out there and chat. On one occasion she offered that differences between faiths
didn’t really matter. As long as people believed in God and tried to be good, that
was enough.
Now
I don’t know that Reba actually thought there were no significant differences
between Jews, Christians, Muslims, and so on. Her statement may have been a
mixture of her being very hospitable to me combined with a tactic she had long
used to blend in as a religious minority. I don’t really know. But there are
many people who see the “All faiths are basically the same” idea as a good way to
bridge religious differences.
Given
the problems some religious folks cause, it’s tempting to think that blurring
the distinctions between groups might help. But a vague, blurry, Christian
identity turns out to be difficult to pass on new generations of believers. It doesn’t
require liturgies, worship services, or institutions. And I wonder if the
widely held notion of Christianity as intolerant, anti-gay, pro-Republican, and
so on, isn’t partly the result of more liberal Christians having blurred our
identity to the point that the Christian part isn’t really visible to others.
If
someone who had not grown up in a church walked up to you and asked, “What does
it mean to be a Christian? What’s non-negotiable?” how would you respond? What
would you tell them beyond, “Believe in God and try to be good”?
When
Jesus is asked about what is non-negotiable, he answers by quoting from Scripture,
our Old Testament. He starts with the Shema from Deuteronomy.
“Hear, O Israel: the Lord our God, the Lord is one; you shall love the Lord
your God with all your heart, and will all your soul (or life), and with all
your mind, and with all your strength.”
But
Jesus doesn’t stop there. He was asked for the commandment that is “first
of all,” but he adds as second, from Leviticus, “You shall love our neighbor as
yourself.”
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