Fourth, the concept of the god of the machine at the end of the Greek
tragedies. Wheeled in to provide answers, solutions, protection and help,
religion might be likened to a spiritual chemist shop.
So much for the analysis, what of the alternative?
Bonhoeffer's response was a call to non-religious interpretation of the
Bible, which fundamentally meant a call to follow Jesus in his way of
discipleship, whereby the four distinguishing marks of religion become
anachronistic.
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In place of the lonely individual, intent on the inward journey, Jesus
is revealed as the man for others. Gregarious from the start, the only
time he is alone is in his death, the awfulness of which is an enforced
loneliness and forsakenness without any way of a transcendent escape. Thus
for Jesus, if we might adopt the marvellous imagery of Dennis Potter, God
is not the bandage, God is the wound. But remember, the hand that inflicts
the wound also holds the cure. So the meaning of the resurrection of Jesus
is the establishing, now not of a localised but of a universal presence
which opens up the whole of life as the sphere of human worship of God.
When I was considering how to speak of these things, my first thought
was to find what I judged to be central Biblical passages that would
unambiguously support Bonhoeffer's case about the Biblical critique of
religion. My second thought was how wrong this would be. For if we cannot
make the case with the lectionary readings for today, or for any Sunday,
then the case cannot be made at all.
So just a brief word or two in reverse order as the gospel, epistle and
the Old Testament subvert the religious paradigm as described by
Bonhoeffer.
How many times have we heard the feeding of the 5000? Hunger in the
midst of life: not an individualistic hunger, but a communal hunger. The
harsh realities of life have to do with recurring hunger. It happens in
the midst of life, and it comes unsought. Make no mistake; it will come to
you if it has not already done so. Sooner or later, in some unanticipated
way, no matter how hard you try to prevent it, you will be desperately
hungry. Life will wound you. But it is in just this desolation that that
other radical disturbance we call faith, not religion, will feed you.
Religion tries to shore itself up against the ravages of hunger, like the
rich man in the gospel who wanted to build bigger barns to hoard his food
against uncertain times. And God says: "You fool! Faith knows that it
cannot secure the future like this, but that - unlike the bargaining
securities of religion - it must wait not only on the moment. Faith
equally understands that famine is a shared problem alleviated by the
promise of the unexpected and the unplanned - the only true miracle - a
shared feast, not at the boundaries of the human predicament, but in the
midst of life.
And the epistle? The reading above begins the extended treatment by
Paul of the problem, given the logic of the gospel, of the relationship of
the emerging Christian movement to the parent faith of Judaism, which, as
a Jew himself, he had every right and authority to undertake. He sees his
people's history with God stretching back to its creative past: "To
them - he could equally have said to me - to them belong the adoption, the
glory, the covenants, the giving of the law, the worship, the promises,
the patriarchs, from whom comes the messiah." In another context, he
was able to call all this in question: "circumcised on the 8th day, a
member of the people of Israel of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of the
Hebrews, as to the law, a Pharisee, as to righteousness under the law,
blameless."
Paul himself used coarse, disparaging language to describe religion and
these inheritances in comparison to the surpassing value of knowing Christ
Jesus his Lord. But here too, in this letter to the Romans, is a
"radical disturbance", which is the best definition I know for
the word faith. How will the future be in discontinuity with the
rock-solid formation of his life as a Jew, of his hitherto whole
existence? This new intervention in his life was something quite concrete,
not at the boundaries, not in the gap, not as some spurious answer to a
need, but as a radically new imposition making old things new.
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But it is the Old Testament reading above that is so powerful. Arguably
there is no more strange or perplexing narrative than this in the whole
Bible, not least for the boldness of the language and the symbolism. It
comes between the description of Jacob's preparation to meet his brother
Esau and the subsequent account of that meeting. That meeting provoked in
Jacob anxious fear, as well it might, for a brother's grudge had had the
opportunity to fester for 20 years. A conciliatory message sent to Esau
elicits the information that Esau is on the way to meet him with a
threateningly large force. Jacob deals with the situation in three ways:
he takes sensible military precautions, he prays, and he sends lavish
presents in an attempt to appease Esau - God interposed, as it were,
between two quite worldly self-regarding strategies. Was the existence of
God a product of a private rational conclusion about the meaning of life?
Quite the contrary. His calculated machinations against his brother,
designed to win the favour of his father, had now come back to haunt him.
But it is the answer to his prayer that is so startling. Jacob is
radically disturbed. This unsought encounter was of a concentrated and
enduring struggle against a nameless opponent. His prayer for help is
answered in the struggle, in the darkness of the eerie gorge of Jabbok
with someone who turns out to be God. Jacob's greatest need, you see, is
not how to come to terms with Esau but how to come to terms with God. God
is not there to answer a selfish cry. This was to be a costly experience,
the cost symbolised by the dislocating of Jacob's hip. Yet Jacob
perseveres, struggles, refuses to let his unknown assailant go, until he
finds that he has seen God face to face. And out of that struggle comes a
new Jacob, symbolised by a new name. The name Jacob - in this case aptly -
means "the deceiver", or "twister". The new name
Israel means "one who has striven with God". It is this new
Jacob - new not only in name but in character - who now goes to meet Esau.
But the point is that when one encounters God one is always afflicted -
not just spiritually, as we like to say these days, but here physically
too. Jacob limps forever because of this radical disturbance. Faith -
acceptance of radical disturbance - rather than religion is always an
option, but an option rarely taken. The most interesting people I think
you will find are almost always those who walk with a limp: perhaps
nothing as extreme as the father of modern existententialism, the great
Danish theologian/philosopher Soren
Kierkegaard, who knew more than anyone about this struggle, and who as
his way of limping walked around the streets of Copenhagen with one
trouser leg shorter than the other.
So may you too spend the rest of your life limping. The ambiguities of
religion, not to speak of irreligion, could well make you sad. Faith on
the other hand is always joyous, though it comes at a price - the limp.
The joy of limping is that it is a sign both to you and to everyone else
that - perhaps for the first time - now you have a name, a name that in
due course will allow you to give God a name.
And then you will find that, no matter what befalls you, how much
better it is to limp than to be hungry!
This is an edited version of a sermon preached in
the Ormond College chapel, University of Melbourne in September 2002.