Sunday, February 25, 2024

Sermon: Get Behind Me, Satan!

Lectionoary: Lent 2A
Text: Mark 8:27-9:1

https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=56514
Get Thee Behind Me, Satan! (Tissot)

Introduction – the Allure of Power

When we think of power and the powerful, what are the things that come to mind? Billionaires and their influence over the economy? Leaders of nations? The strength of military might? Autocrats and dictators who hold life and death in their hands? Politicians who hold purse strings? Corporate CEOs? Sports figures, entertainers, etc. that command huge followings and associated paydays? Pastors with mega and giga churches? Leaders of influential religious organizations? Love them or hate them, we cannot deny that these things are a large presence in our world and our lives.

The allure of power is strong. Whether in 1st century Palestine, or in 21st century America, the temptation to seize upon power or at least to be aligned with the powerful is nearly impossible to escape. Power – through position, wealth and both – is offered and withheld to influence and control outcomes beneficial to the powerful. The less powerful cling to the coattails of those with more power to attempt to ride up the ladder and share the crumbs that fall.

Are any of us completely immune to the attractions of power and what it offers? In the Christian calendar, the seasons of both Advent and Lent are times when the subject matter should lead us away from the pursuit of power. Or at least from the popular, temporal concepts of power.

Even in a common Christian phrase, paraphrased “Jesus will return in glory and power”, the common imaginations of power make its way. When we hear that, the imagination runs to a conquering general or king, slaying his enemies as he leads his victorious army.

That Jesus will return in glory and power could imply that during his time on earth as a human, Jesus didn’t have power…, or at least the kind of power that we think ultimately matters.

How we define power and how we view the power wielded by Jesus matters to what it means to be a disciple of Jesus and follow him. To get this wrong is to be on the receiving end of Jesus’ rebuke, “Get behind me, Satan”.

Recap – Gospel Reading

What did you hear when you heard today’s gospel reading? Jesus asked his disciples who others said he was, and then after receiving responses, asked the disciples who they thought he was. Peter responded (speaking for all of them) that Jesus was the Messiah, the Christ, the Anointed One. And then Jesus tells them to not say this to anyone. Immediately afterwards Jesus begins speaking plainly that the Christ must be rejected by those in power and authority, suffer, be killed, and then rise again.

It is at this point that Peter tries to correct Jesus and where Jesus rebukes Peter, saying, “Get behind me, Satan. You are not thinking God’s thoughts but human thoughts.”

Jesus then gathers the crowd together and speaks about what it means to follow him. It involves denying themselves, taking up the cross, and the following Jesus. These are common phrases that we have heard and so maybe do not resonate very strongly with us. But for those who were hearing it for the first time, it meant identifying with the cruelest, most excruciating, and most humiliating form of torture and execution. Jesus further tells the crowd that those who follow him must be willing to lose their lives, and I don’t think he meant it metaphorically. I believe Jesus meant this quite literally.

Context One – Narrative Setting

There are a couple of contexts that we need to consider. The first is the context of the setting in which this narrative takes place. Jesus and his disciples were in the region of Caesarea Phillipi. We probably gloss over this as just an interesting mention of geography. But this is a key detail vital to interpreting this narrative, a narrative that is a turning point in Mark’s gospel account.

Up to this point, Jesus had been performing miracles and winning arguments with the learned scholars and authorities. He was amazing the people. He was defeating demons and demonstrating victory over religious and political powers. Jesus’ power and influence was rising in the popular minds.

It is then that Mark’s account mentions Caesarea Phillipi. David Jacobsen, in his commentary on Mark writes about the significance of the setting:

We begin by noting the setting in 8:27-30… First, we note that the location of the action is Caesarea Phillipi. The name indicates the city was named after Caesar. However, since another Caesarea nearby shared that name, it is distinguished with the second name Phillipi, referring to Phillip, one of Herod’s nearby ruling sons. Digging deeper, one notices that this region has a symbolic significance for our revelatory interlude at the mountain of transfiguration. The region, as Adela Yarebro Collins points out, was connected not only with Mount Hermon[1], but it was also an important location associated first with ruler cults stretching back to the Ptolemies and as recent as a new Herodian temple “in honor of Augustus.” In short, this revelatory discussion is happening in a region of imperial religious significance. It is no mere bit of local color or backdrop but is central to understanding the give and take that results in Peter’s confession. Second, the narrator goes out of his way to describe Jesus’ initiatory question in the dialogue as happening “on the way” in v. 28. “On the way is” is discipleship language. We are thus engaging the back and forth of question and response, rebuke and rebuke, in the material that follows not as an intellectual exercise, nor even as one about Christological speculation, but as one connected deeply to discipleship and the nature of the gospel itself. (Jacobsen, 2014)

Considering that information, what I see is the Markan gospel informing his readers that yes, Jesus has been demonstrating his power, and one might be tempted to seize upon it to gain religious, political, and military benefits. But that is not the power of Jesus.

A few weeks ago I noted in the sermon that the Markan account of the wilderness test does not include details nor the “Get behind me, Satan” words that are recorded in Matthew, or the “Don’t test the Lord” found in Luke. But we find “Get behind me, Satan” in Mark at this midpoint of his gospel. A plausible interpretation is that this is the point in Mark’s gospel where Jesus is strongly tested to take the easier path, the path of using his miraculous powers and ability to outwit the learned minds to lead the nation, build an empire, and rule the world.

It is at this point where Christians, Christian organizations and churches throughout history have been tempted and often failed. The offer of power often seems innocuous and even beneficial. Who wouldn’t think that a little bit of gaining influence from the power-that-be wouldn’t be beneficial to the proclamation and spread of the gospel? But from gaining a little bit of help from the governing powers, it soon leads to the thought that if a little power is good, more power would be better. Wouldn’t a Christian nation that follows Christian principles be a great idea? And from there the national agenda becomes “what God wants.” (And by the way, who gets to define what is “Christian” and what isn’t?)

If Jesus were to come amongst us today, I suspect there will be a quite a lot of, “Get behind me, Satan,” coming from his mouth.

Context Two – Literary Setting

The second context to consider in reading this text is that setting in which the gospel account was weaved and edited together and the audience to whom it was written. The account was probably written not too long after the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE. Although there are no records of systematic persecution of Christians during the first century, there were sporadic, regional persecutions. The Great Fire of Rome in 64 CE was blamed on Christians.

Christians were still a small sect that was ostensibly Jewish, but the separation had begun. Perhaps some of the Jewish communities and synagogues had already begun to reject the followers of Jesus and deny the religious protections that they had been under as Jews.

In times of suffering, distress, and uncertainty, apocalyptic literature flourishes. We see this in our own history. During uncertain times, arts and entertainment tend to get darker as they utilize the apocalyptic genre to try to explain what happened, what is going on, and to offer a dark hope for the future.

It was no different in ancient times. Daniel is an apocalyptic book written sometime during the second century BCE, where the Jews attempt to explain what has happened with the rise of Antiochus IV Epiphanes of the Seleucid Empire and his desecration of the Temple.

The book of Revelation is a Christian apocalyptic literature that attempts to explain what has happened from the destruction of the Temple and the seemingly unstoppable power of the Roman Empire against God.

Here are a few features that are common through apocalyptic literature. The first is that they tend to be morally dualistic. A Yale lecture on apocalyptic literature states, “They tend to divide humankind into two mutually exclusive groups; the righteous which is always a tiny minority, and the wicked, which is always the vast majority. There’s going to be some final public judgment and the righteous will be saved and the wicked will be destroyed.” (Yale University, n.d.)

Another feature is that they tend to predict catastrophes, suffering, and persecution. “These are signs of the coming of the end, that final point in the march of history that’s being laid out. You have motifs from ancient myths very often used to describe these catastrophes.” (Yale University, n.d.)

A third feature is that they offer a “behind the scenes” look at what is going on in the supernatural realm, the divine realm, hidden to normal vision.

The last feature I will note here is that,

… Apocalyptic literature can be described as a literature of hope and despair. It’s a literature of despair or pessimism because its basic premise is that this world holds out no promise for the righteous. It’s a literature of hope or optimism because it affirms that God will intervene. He will intervene in human history, he’ll set everything right, he’ll interrupt the natural order, he’s going to destroy this broken world as we know it, and he’ll do so in order to rescue the righteous and humiliate the wicked, and if you’ve already died don’t worry there will be a resurrection, it will all be made right. (Yale University, n.d.)

Hearing an Apocalypse

Although the gospel of Mark is not strictly in the apocalyptic genre, scholars identify apocalyptic themes running through all of it, including the passage we read as our text today. The stark dualism between following Jesus and not following him is presented in the image of carrying a cross. Suffering and death are offered as the norm for following Jesus. In Jesus’ rebuke to Peter, we get the idea that something else is going on “behind the scenes” that is diametrically opposed to what is seen in the world. And finally, Jesus predicts the rescue of his followers who remain faithful to him when he returns.

Writing to a powerless, ostracized, and possibly persecuted people, I see Mark telling his audience to resist the temptation to pursue gaining worldly power to try to improve their conditions.

Jesus said, “36 Why would people gain the whole world but lose their lives? 37 What will people give in exchange for their lives? 38 Whoever is ashamed of me and my words in this unfaithful and sinful generation, the Human One will be ashamed of that person when he comes in the Father’s glory with the holy angels.” (Mark 8:36-38 CEB) In my experience, this statement has often been applied to evangelism and witnessing. But looking at the overall context of this passage, I think a more appropriate application is found in rejecting the temptation to seek to harness powers of this world, even if it might seem to be beneficial in spreading the gospel or improving the general conditions of Christian existence in this world. That said, I don’t think there is a problem with working with modern means of governance to improve the lots of all people. But I do think that privileging Christians over others would still prompt a “Get behind me, Satan,” from Jesus.

The final sentence of today’s reading where Jesus says, “I assure you that some standing here won’t die before they see God’s kingdom arrive in power,” (Mark 9:1 CEB) has been interpreted many ways. A common one is that it refers to some of his disciples who experience the Transfiguration, the narrative which immediately follows. But many scholars accept this as an unfulfilled prediction, that perhaps Jesus got it wrong (or Mark’s editing got it wrong), or that it remains for when Jesus returns.

Conclusion – Redefining “Power”

And it is here that we see the word “power” identified with God and God’s kingdom. In isolation it is easy to interpret this as the kind of strength and might associated with rulers and armies of this world. But Jesus’ power was in his suffering, in his humiliation, in his death, and in his love for the world. The power of Jesus is to use his story to persuade listeners to follow and imitate him. History is witness to the reality that Jesus’ persuasive power is stronger than the might of armies. The persuasive power of suffering and sacrificing love changed civilization.

During this season of Lent, let us remember the power of Christ’s love for the world, that we would not just be Christians, but disciples and followers of Jesus, carrying the cross and enduring suffering, humiliation, and even loss so that we too, can become agents of divine persuasive love in the world.[2]


References

Bartlett, D. L., & Taylor, B. B. (2008). Feasting on the Word: Year B, Volume 2 (Preaching the Revised Common Lectionary). Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press.

Jacobsen, D. S. (2014). Fortress Biblical Preaching Commentaries: Mark. Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press.

Jarvis, C. A., & Johnson, E. E. (2014). Feasting on the Gospels: Mark (A Feasting on the Word Commentary). Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press.

McLaren, B. (2024, February 22). Life As a Spiritual Journey: Following Jesus is A Journey. Retrieved from Center for Action and Contemplation: https://cac.org/daily-meditations/following-jesus-is-a-journey/

Whitaker, R. J. (2023). Revelation for Normal People: A Guide to the Strangest and Most Dangerous Book in the Bible. Harleysville, PA: The Bible for Normal People.

Yale University. (n.d.). Lecture 23 - Visions of the End: Daniel and Apocalpytic Literature. (Open Yale Courses) Retrieved February 21, 2024, from RLST 145: Introduction to the Old Testament (Hebrew Bible): https://oyc.yale.edu/religious-studies/rlst-145/lecture-23



[1] Highest peak in ancient Israel, considered a holy mountain by many peoples, and location of many Roman shrines on its slopes.

[2] “The word Christian is more familiar to us today than the word disciple. These days, Christian often seems to apply more to the kinds of people who would push Jesus off a cliff than it does to his true followers. Perhaps the time has come to rediscover the power and challenge of that earlier, more primary word disciple [which] occurs over 250 times in the New Testament, in contrast to the word Christian, which occurs only three times. Maybe those statistics are trying to tell us something.” (McLaren, 2024)

 

Sunday, February 18, 2024

Sermon: Inevitable Wilderness

Kramskoĭ, Ivan Nikolaevich, 1837-1887. Christ in the Wilderness, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=54297
Christ in the Wilderness
Lectionary: Lent 1(B) 
Text: Genesis 9:8-17; Psalm 25:1-10; 1 Peter 3:18-22; Mark 1:9-15

Introduction

Who hasn’t gone on a vacation to an exotic or exciting location and wanted to stay there for the rest of their lives? Or perhaps you’ve had a fantastic experience – maybe a social gathering, a spectacular concert, a most exquisite meal – that you didn’t want to leave? Or maybe it was a time when you were given an honor of some kind and you felt that you had significance and made a difference to those around you and the world?

There are moments in our lives that stand out and leave an impression – moments that remain in our memories, times and places that we savor and relive, events and actions that might even define who we are.

Last Sunday was Transfiguration Sunday, where we heard about when God reminded Jesus and the three disciples with him who Jesus was. To help reinforce the importance of that moment, Moses and Elijah accompanied the theophany – reminding those present of their founding narrative and their history as a people, nation, and their belonging to God. It was a high moment, and for the three disciples, based on their reactions, it must have been the most amazing moment they had ever experienced. They wanted to remain there, to continue experiencing that moment, to never leave it.

There are a couple of reasons why we cannot remain in an elevated state for an extended period. The first is that our brains simply don’t work that way. Our brains prefer to be in a state where it isn’t overtaxed by the flooding of neurotransmitters. If we remain in a state of stimulation, eventually that becomes the new normal, our brains regulate the production of chemicals, and what was new and exciting turns to feeling normal and ordinary. We then crave something bigger and more exciting than before. While you might be able to do this a few times, eventually there is a limit.

A second reason is that much of the people of this world live most of their lives in mundane normalcy at best. The ability to choose to go and experience something extraordinary is, in most cases, something afforded because of leisure time and disposable wealth. For many, it may be a once-in-a-lifetime event for which they save their entire lives to make that journey. And there are many others who will never have that opportunity. Plenty more live in privation and suffering their entire lives.

When Jesus and the three disciples accompanying descend from the mountain, they are immediately thrust into the difficulties and sufferings of the human experience. They encounter a father whose son has some sort of problem that prevents him from speaking and causes him to throw himself into harmful environments.

As much as the disciples may have wanted to remain apart from the ordinariness and difficulties of life, Jesus does not share their desires. His place was with those who were suffering and lead his disciples back into the places where people were hurting.

Driven to the Wilderness

With that prologue, we return to the gospel text for today. It begins with Jesus’ baptism and God’s anointing of Jesus and the accompanying declaration affirming Jesus’ relationship to God and God’s love for Jesus. It is a kind of mountaintop experience.

But that is immediately (Mark’s word) followed by the very same Spirit of anointing driving Jesus into the wilderness. Unlike in the gospel account of John, there is no period of time where Jesus remains in the mountaintop. Jesus spends forty days in the wilderness and during that time he is tested and tried. Matthew and Luke’s accounts offer some examples of the tests that Jesus faced, but Mark’s account is brief.

Where Mark records that Jesus was among the wild animals, interpreters take a few different positions. A common one is that he faced natural threats of the wilderness. But an intriguing speculative interpretation is that he was not threatened by them, but instead that they gave him warmth and protection, perhaps as an early sign of recreation that he was ushering in.[1]

Another difference between Mark and the accounts of Matthew/Luke is that in Mark’s account, the plainest interpretation is that the angels took care of Jesus all during the forty days; while in Matthew/Luke, the angels appear only after the trials are won.

It is only after Jesus spends time in the wilderness, and facing trials and tests there, that he re-enters his community to offer good news.

Examples of Wilderness Experiences

Today’s Old Testament reading from Genesis and the New Testament reading from 1 Peter imply an interpretive connection with the Flood story. Setting aside some of the problematic questions raised by that story, the interpretive connection made is to the waters, prefiguring baptism, and God’s act of salvation through the waters. Although the readings do not note it, the literary record of the duration of the active flooding was forty days.

Another connection to the Israel story that can be found is with the forty years that Israel wandered in the wilderness. After the mountaintop experience of Sinai, where God spoke and established God’s relationship with Israel, Israel spends the next forty years wandering in the wilderness. Setting aside the reason this happened, the thematic elements of trials and testing remain. At the end of the forty years Israel enters Canaan, the promised land where they are finally able to experience good news (although the reality of what they faced in Canaan could be said to have been quite different). The forty years might also be interpreted as preparation time needed for the Israelites to conquer Canaan.

There is a connection, too, with Moses as an individual. After slaying an Egyptian and getting found out, he fled to Midian where he spent forty years tending sheep in the wilderness.[2] At the end of these forty years Moses meets God in a burning bush at a mountain called Horeb. Horeb and Sinai are understood by scholars to be the same geographical feature. The forty years in the wilderness is preparation time before God calls Moses to lead Israel.

Finally, we bring in also Elijah from the mount of transfiguration and a parallel that can be found in his story. After three years of drought, Elijah confronts Ahab and the prophets of Baal at Mt. Carmel. After a resounding victory and the massacre of the prophets of Baal, Jezebel is furious and seeks to kill Elijah. Elijah flees to Mt. Horeb (a parallel with Moses can be found here). He spends forty days there, refreshed by a supernatural messenger from God during that time. At the end of the forty days God speaks to Elijah and gives him new instructions and messages to bring to the people.[3]

Several observations can be made from what has been described thus far.

·        Forty is part of a literary archetype where the person or persons involved undergo some kind of ordeal and/or preparation which is necessary (in the archetype) for the character(s) to make progress in their journey.

·        The Bible is ambiguous about the source and cause of trials and suffering. Is suffering punishment? Are trials something God initiates? Does God simply allow suffering and trials to come upon people? Or are they just part of life which God neither wills or controls?

·        Much of life is lived away from mountaintop experiences, in the ordinary, that includes suffering and trials.

Ancient Historical and Literary Contexts

As is often the case, bringing in historical literary and cultural contexts prove useful in getting better sense of the whys and whats of these stories.

The first point that is relevant to our discussion is that ancient people lived in social and political structures very different from what we know and consider to be the ideal. Those of us here live in a democracy and we assume a great degree of agency and independence for ourselves. Ancient people did not live in a democracy, and they did not have much agency over their lives.[4] They accepted that someone was over them, directing much of what they were allowed to do. They could be commanded to do something and they had no choice but to obey. They believed that gods were all powerful but not necessarily good. Gods could be capricious. If the gods wanted someone to go through periods of trials and sufferings, so be it. It was the gods will.[5] Even when it was accepted that God was loving, it was also fully expected that part of this “love” included God punishing people and making them suffer for their disobedience.[6]

Ancient people also believed everything had to have some kind of intentional cause, and those things that couldn’t be explained, they believed gods were the cause. Most of us don’t believe that way anymore and realize that many things simply happen because of randomness that is a part of our universe and existence.[7]

The stories in our Bible fit with the norms and expectations of the ancient societies which birthed them. But do they codify universal and timeless principles? Answers vary and are based on one’s or a group’s view of God, which frequently come from a reading of scripture. And here it often ends up as a case of circular reasoning.

In Our Time and Place

What then, might be some ways of interpreting and understanding these ancient texts in a 21st century context during the season of Lent?

I believe that the framework of the literary archetype we encountered today, commonly identified as The Hero’s Journey, is a useful framework which can be used to explain major life seasons. I don’t believe that we are required to experience this journey, or that God causes or brings stages into each person’s life. However, I do think that they are inevitable consequences of having been born into this universe.

I do believe that what the biblical stories offer us is a glimpse into how humans, when they are willing, can use difficult times that inevitably come about as a tool to learn and grow, to become more empathetic and compassionate, to identify with those who are going through difficulties, and to discover God’s faithfulness and care especially during those times.

Times of difficulties, trials, and suffering inevitably will come to us. Our natural inclination might be to try to avoid them or to pretend they aren’t happening. Or perhaps they go on for a long time and we would rather give up.

What today’s gospel reading reveals is that the gospel, the good news, comes from having experienced both the highs and lows of life. The highs offer a vision of what could be. The lows reveal the depths of the brokenness of life. The gospel of Jesus Christ offers the way out of the lows of life into the lifelong journey toward the kingdom of God.

Lent is a reminder that this journey is not a steady rise nor a journey where troubles cease. But it is a journey with Christ. It is a path that Christ traveled and through it overcame the ultimate obstacle: death. In that sense then, it is a path that anyone who wishes to overcome death must also travel.

The good news of the kingdom is not that joining with Christ will remove problems from our lives. The good news is that Christ suffered and joins in our sufferings. The good news is that Christ overcame and so can we.