Acts 11:1-18 (Revelation 21:1-6)
Seeing Visions and Dreaming Dreams
James Sledge April
28, 2013
Longer
ago that I like to admit, I spent a year as a high school history teacher. One
day in World History class we covered a unit of European history that included
the Protestant Reformation. As we discussed Martin Luther and his church reform
attempts that led to a split with the Roman Catholic Church, a young woman in
the class raised her hand.
She
was a popular student, a cheerleader, and she had a confused, befuddled look on
her face. “Mr. Sledge, do you mean that Roman Catholics are Christians, too?” I
have no recollection of how I responded to her. All I remember is how stunned I
was by her question.
In
retrospect, I probably shouldn’t have been. This was Charlotte, NC in the early
1980s, and in much of the South, Catholics and Jews were somewhat rare until
the late 20th century. This young woman was from a rural background,
and she likely knew of Catholics only by stereotype. To her they were those
strange people who worshiped the pope rather than God. They were, in some
fuzzy sort of way, an enemy, and so naturally they weren’t Christian.
Now
clearly this student’s understanding of Catholics was rooted in bigotry that seems
almost comical in this day and age. But of course us versus them divisions are a part of just about everyone’s life.
We may laugh off some as harmless, like those connected to sports teams or
colleges, but many are not.
Racial
divisions are still a huge problem for our country. And right now, our
partisan, political divide seems to be a particular curse. Having contrasting
political parties and ideas can be a wonderful thing, bringing different
perspectives to difficult issues or problems. But when the other side becomes a
“them” whom we demonize, declare an enemy, and dismiss as evil, the beneficial
side of such divisions largely disappears.
For
the early Christians, the division between Jew and Gentile was the ultimate us versus them. Jews could not even eat
with Gentiles, which caused huge problems as Gentiles began to hear about the
risen Jesus and wanted to join the movement. It’s hard to appreciate in our day,
but those first Christians did not think they had stopped being Jewish. They
did not think they had started a new religion. And so when Gentiles wanted to join,
they had to become Jewish first, males be circumcised, abide by Jewish dietary
restrictions, and so on.