Sunday, October 27, 2024

Sermon: Struggling with Hope

Lectionary: Proper 25(B)
Texts: Jeremiah 31:7-9; Psalm 126; Hebrews 7:23-28

A Prophetic Word of Hope

The Southern kingdom of Israel, Judah, was steadily falling to the Babylonian armies. With each defeat, the victors would send a selection of the defeated populace to Babylon as captives. Those who had little value to the Babylonians were left to eke out a meager existence while tending to the land where they were left.

Our first reading, taken from Jeremiah, was written sometime during this portion of Judah’s history. It is part of an oracle of hope, given by God, to the people who were experiencing the destruction and desolation of their land.

For ancient societies, there were two things that were vitally important: land and their gods. For the Israelites, the land was slowly being taken from them, and their God appeared powerless to prevent it. The future would have appeared utterly bleak and hopeless.

Into this void, God spoke through prophets, including Jeremiah. God told the people that their actions had caused this, and that they would suffer consequences, but they would not be completely abandoned and forgotten. God affirms that, after some time, God would work to bring the people back to their land.

A Hymn of Hope

The reading from the Psalms seems to have been composed after the return from exile, when at least some of the people have returned to their land and Jerusalem had seen some reconstruction.

There is joy at the return and what God has done for them. Yet there is a sense that they are still facing an uncertain future. There is still a call from the people to God to continue to improve their condition and petitions that their work toward reconstruction and restoration will not be in vain.

A Sermon of Hope

Early Christians Losing Hope

Now we jump ahead many centuries and arrive somewhere between the mid and late first century in the Common Era. It’s now been a few to several decades since the crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus.

This new sect of Judaism, because that’s what it was, was establishing communities around the major centers of the Roman empire. They had a sense of urgency, because Jesus was returning soon to finish what had been started.

But then, the years passed. Many of the disciples who had been closest with Jesus and had been the founders of this movement had died in one manner or another. There were sporadic conflicts with the Romans. There were ongoing differences with other forms of Judaism. The expectations and hope for the future return of Jesus and the establishment of the kingdom of God had not yet come to pass. The light began to dim and fade away.

At least for some of these followers of Jesus, it seemed easier to drift away and avoid any kind of conflict. For others, returning to practice more of the accepted traditions of Judaism would allow them to exist more peaceably with other Jews and the Romans would recognize them as licit Jews, practicing a state-approved form of religion.

It is to this situation to which someone speaks a sermon that we now have in the Christian scriptures as the book of Hebrews.

Unknown Provenance of Hebrews

Some English Bible translations might include “The Epistle (or Letter) to” the Hebrews in the title, but the best scholarly consensus is that this work does not contain any literary features that would mark it as a letter. Furthermore, “Hebrews” itself was added by an editor due to the very Jewish content of the work. No one knows who might have given the sermon nor the specific audience that would have heard it first.

You might have heard the idea that this work was written by Paul. But virtually no contemporary biblical scholar accepts Pauline authorship. Even in the early church, its authorship was anonymous. If one were to try to assign authorship, a couple leading candidates today include Apollos and Priscilla, with some circumstantial, but strong evidence pointing toward Priscilla.

The early church, despite its lack of strong provenance and authorship, found the sermon valuable that it was included in the collection of works that would eventually become the Christian canon.

The Hope in Hebrews

The thrust of the sermon is that Jesus is the ultimate messenger, better than prophets and even angelic messengers. Jesus is better than human priests, because, where human priests must offer regular sacrifice for their sins and they die, Jesus is without sin and he is a priest forever. Whereas human priests perform their duties in a sanctuary that is only a shadow, Jesus is the ultimate high priest who performs his duties in heaven, which is the perfect sanctuary, in the very presence of God.

If this work we call Hebrews was originally presented prior to the fall of Jerusalem in 70 CE, it would have been intended to encourage the audience to remain faithful to the way of Christ, not the way mediated by human priests. The themes in Hebrews highlight the superiority of Christ over all other ways of approaching God.

If the work was presented after the fall of Jerusalem, it could have been spoken or written as a way of explaining why the Temple fell and how one might now look upon the priestly ministry that was part of being a Jew. It would have provided hope to the Christ-following sect of Jews that the real high priest and temple were no longer to be found on earth, but in heaven.

Both potential explanations offer reasons for why the early church found Hebrews valuable. It offers one of the most distinctive and precise Christologies found in scripture. It explains the superiority of Christ over all other powers and entities. And it explains why worship and religious service is better when they are not tied down to a specific location, such as a temple.

Caution When Interpreting Hebrews

But the interpretive history of Hebrews also contains dark moments. Because its basic argument is “Jesus is better than everything else,” it has led to the idea that Christianity replaces Judaism, and therefore, it can lead to the idea Jews are not as good as Christians. And then you can see how that reasoning can further lead to very dark places.

To prevent that kind of dark logic, we need to understand a few things about Hebrews.

First, it addressed an audience who were already long-time followers of Christ. It was not a message to a general audience nor one that was trying to persuade non-Christians of the superiority of Christianity. It was meant to persuade already-Christians that they should endure and hold on, and not give up hope in Christ.

Second, when the situation is dire, as it may have been with the Hebrews audience, stronger language and what could be seen as divisive language might be employed to exhort the listener. Outside of religious settings, we can see this tactic employed in other areas. An example might be a business CEO who uses strong rhetoric to motivate and inspire employees to go after the competition, or to reassure them that their products are superior.

A final point to consider is that whoever was the original speaker or author of this sermon probably had no idea it would be recorded to be read for the next two millennia. If they were aware that it would become part of a permanent collection, and had they known that it might be misinterpreted and misused, they might have used different words.

Returning to the three readings for today, each of them has hope as the thread that runs through them. For one, it is clinging to a word of hope when facing what appears to be literal existential threats. For another, it is experiencing improvements, yet still hoping for more. And for another, it is staying true to hope when expectations have not been met and the grass looks greener on the other side of the fence.

Struggling to Apprehend Hope

I really struggle with the idea of hope, because it can easily devolve into wishful thinking or naïve optimism. On the other hand, hope in God can likewise be difficult. How does one hope in a being or the being’s words when that being is seemingly absent from the world’s affairs? When we observe the disasters and cataclysms, both natural and human-caused, when we see the strife and violence and death that is everywhere, and evil seems to reign, and God is absent… can we have hope in what God has claimed?

I wish I could give you an answer to these deep questions. I wish I could have even a start of an answer for myself. But these are questions that have troubled theologians and philosophers for a very long time with no definitive answers.

Christ’s Example; Our Actions to Invite Hope

Instead, what I want to direct your thoughts to is back to Christ. We believe that Jesus Christ, through his life, ministry, and death, demonstrated what God is like. Jesus exemplified God’s love so that we humans could comprehend it.

Jesus’ own ministry was not grand or that far reaching. What he did was do and say things that uplifted people that he encountered in his daily life and travels about a limited geography.  Jesus didn’t offer grand answers to philosophical questions. But he saw every individual as a valuable person, created in God’s image. Jesus built a small community around him to continue his methods of offering hope and love.

Maybe that’s what it means to have hope and share hope. Maybe hope is found in doing things that matter to our neighbors. Maybe hope is knowing that we matter to someone. Maybe hope is knowing that our very presence has value. And maybe to love someone is to help them learn to accept that they too, have value and that they matter to us.

God says that we are loved and valued, but if we are the body of Christ, then doesn’t it make sense that how we love and value those among us might be the way we communally experience the hope of the kingdom of God as it grows among us?

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