Sabbath
Fritz Bogar • June 15, 2018
One of the great mysteries of human civilization is how a tiny middle eastern cult managed to make its own distinctive view of time into the world standard. Days are easy to understand; months correspond roughly to lunar cycles; and even years correspond to the stars and the seasons. But a seven day week reflects nothing in human experience. It is ideological, not experiential. The story of a six day creation and a seventh day to rest may be the basis of the idea or its justification, a chicken-and-egg kind of puzzle, but it doesn’t explain how such an idea has persisted and become universal across cultures and religious identities. 
Of course, it is the seventh day that particularly interests us. The seventh day is the special day; the others are ordinary. “Six days you shall labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is a sabbath to the LORD . . .” For Jews, sabbath begins Friday at sundown and ends Saturday at sundown. Christians early on adopted the Roman practice of midnight-to-midnight days and shifted Sabbath from the end of the week to the Lord’s Day, the first day of the week. 
The practice of Sabbath remains varied, ambiguous, and largely negative. Clearly, “keeping,” “remembering,” or “obeying” the Sabbath has meant identifying what we can’t or shouldn’t do: work most obviously – although defining “work” has vexed the faithful down
to the present day. Many Protestants added entertainments” as something to be avoided. Luther shifted the focus from rest to holiness: “because we all do not have the time and leisure, we must set aside several hours a week for the young people, or at least a day for the whole community, when we can concentrate only on these matters and deal especially with the Ten Commandments, the Creed, and the Lord’s Prayer, and thus regulate our entire life and being in accordance with God’s word. Whenever this practice is in force, a holy day is truly kept” [Luther’s Larger Catechism]. In the Westminster Shorter Catechism, the dual nature of rest and devotion is succinctly stated: “The Sabbath is to be sanctified by a holy resting all that day, even from such worldly employments and recreations as are lawful on other days; and spending the whole time in the public and private exercises of God’s worship, except so much as is to be taken up in the works of necessity and mercy.” [A. 60].
Jesus was regularly in conflict with the devout of his day over what was permissible and what forbidden on the Sabbath. Mark says that Jesus was grieved at his opponents’ “hardness of heart,” and condemned them for having distorted priorities: “The Sabbath was made for people, and not people for the Sabbath.” Jesus is in good company. Amos the prophet upbraids his auditors for hiding behind Sabbath regulations while “buying the poor for silver and the needy for a pair of sandals.” Likewise, Isaiah identifies genuine sabbath observance as the touchstone of faithfulness: If you refrain from trampling the sabbath, from pursuing your own interests on my holy day; if you call the sabbath a delight and the holy day of the LORD honorable; if you honor it, not going your own ways, serving your own interests, or pursuing your own affairs; then you shall take delight in the LORD, and I will make you ride upon the heights of the earth; I will feed you with the heritage of your ancestor Jacob, for the mouth of the LORD has spoken. [58:13-14].
What is surprising is how little reflection we have received from our theological forebearers on the notion that we worship a God who rests and invites rest. Surely in a world like ours where the drive is always in the direction of more production, more acquisition, and more consumption, this idea of a God who rests is destabilizing and subversive. Yet many Christians have so abandoned even the vestige of Sabbath that only Chic-Fil-A is recognizably Sabbatarian in our culture. Indeed, we have become the people of Nine Commandments (or less). Rest is inviting, but we really don’t know how to do it without becoming legalistic. Worship is worthwhile, but for an hour, not for a day. 
Walter Brueggemann’s little book, Sabbath As Resistance, will help us reflect on the meaning and practice of Sabbath. There will be other resources as well, including each other. Join us for a fellowship meal Wednesdays at 6:00 (soup du jour provided; bring a side or dessert to share), and discussion to follow at 6:45.
Fritz

Respectability is a subtle master. As long as one travels the middle of the road the guard rails on the left and the right are scarcely noticed. It is safe, comforting, and even alluring to be among so many fellow travelers. There is no obvious constraint; only the gravitational pull realigning us to a broad conformity. Go along to get along. Should one be tempted to step out of line, to go one’s own way, to question what has already been answered, to challenge conventionality, there are only two possible outcomes: surrender or marginalization.                                                              The problem with respectability is that it is anchored tightly to the ephemeral and the superficial while presenting itself as permanent and foundational. Respectability once required women to keep their ankles covered, men to be the head of the household, and children to be seen but not heard. The custodians of respectability were horrified when four mop-tops from Liverpool invaded America (and it’s all been downhill ever since). It was once perfectly respectable to speak of dark-skinned people as brutes and savages, homosexuals as mentally ill perverts, and women as homemakers. Some attitudes and actions we can simply dismiss as quaint expressions of a by-gone era; others continue to reverberate to our time constricting our imaginations regarding what is decent, just, and virtuous.                                                              Jesus cared nothing for the canons of respectability in his own day. He would not be fenced in by guard rails designed to keep the good in and the bad out. Jesus purposely transgressed social boundaries, associating with the poor, touching lepers, including women in his entourage, embracing children. He confronted the pious, challenged the hypocrisy of the ruling clique, and exonerated sinners. Jesus did not soft-pedal the demands of his gospel in order to be more appealing. "If any want to become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me.” (Mark 8:34) "Whoever comes to me and does not hate father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters, yes, and even life itself, cannot be my disciple. Whoever does not carry the cross and follow me cannot be my disciple . . . none of you can become my disciple if you do not give up all your possessions.” (Luke 14:26-27, 33). All of this came at a cost: opposition, rejection, humiliation, execution. That’s what respectability does.                                                              Like Jesus, Paul also flaunts the scandalousness of the gospel. He knows well the inherent unbelievability of the message of a crucified Messiah. Ordinary common sense dictates that a crucified person could not be the King of the Universe. It is and always remains foolishness and a stumbling block, Paul insists. But however outside the realm of respectability, this claim is in fact the truth and the power of God.                                                              The more I read the Bible the more I think that the respectability I was raised in and to which I have done my best to conform is not only not the gospel, but is actually a detour from discipleship. I wonder if following a crucified Messiah may require a different path, outside the guard rails, where being polite and nice, where fitting in and avoiding a scene are not the salient virtues. Perhaps naming Jesus as Lord is a grace-filled (and terrifying) opportunity to finally be free of this respectable world and instead, to serve as agents of a new creation yet to be born.                                                                                       Fritz
 

At dawn on April 9, 1945 the pastor and theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer was hanged by Nazi authorities for participating in a conspiracy to assassinate Adolf Hitler and overthrow the government. He was 39 years old. Bonhoeffer had been incarcerated for two years, mainly in Tegel prison in Berlin, and then briefly in Buchenwald, and finally at Flossenburg. He left behind a legacy of academic work, treatises, letters, and diaries – 16 volumes in the standard English and German editions - as well as international friendships across Europe, England, and America. His theological work was original, rooted in his practical experience as a pastor and instructor, and tantalizing in its suggestiveness left tragically unfinished. His commitments were courageous. Much of his writing reflected upon the joys and challenges of Christian life through the prism of the simple question, “What does Jesus Christ mean for today?” Since his martyrdom, Bonhoeffer has only grown in stature, being claimed as inspiration by liberals and evangelicals, socialists and capitalists, theists and atheists.                                                              In 1951 Eberhard Bethge, Bonhoeffer’s student and closest friend, published his letters from prison under the title                       Widerstand und Ergebung                      (                       Resistance and Submission                      ); it was translated into English as                       Letters and Papers from Prison                      , becoming a sensation and creating a popular hunger for all things Bonhoeffer. His little book,                       Life Together                      , a reflection on his experience with the underground (and ultimately banned) Confessing Church seminary at Finkenwalde, has become a modern devotional classic. But it is probably his book Discipleship, first published in an abridged English translation as                       The Cost of Discipleship                      in 1948, that is his most enduring contribution.                                                                          Discipleship                      is a meditation on Jesus’ famous “Sermon on the Mount” (Matthew 5 – 7), reflecting on the nature of Jesus’ call, the response in obedience to follow, and the consequences of such a commitment. The opening pages of the book contrast “cheap grace” with “costly grace.” Cheap grace is that which leaves the recipient unchanged. It is grace without repentance or remorse. It is grace that leaves the recipient in thrall to the world. It is going through the motions. “Cheap grace is the mortal enemy of our church . . . [It is] preaching forgiveness without repentance; it is baptism without the discipline of community; it is the Lord’s Supper without confession of sin; it is absolution without personal confession. Cheap grace is grace without discipleship, grace without the cross, grace without the living, incarnate Jesus Christ” (DBWE 4: 43, 44).                                                              Costly grace, on the other hand, is authentic grace. It is grace that takes hold of a person and at the same time sets one free. It is grace as a yoke which binds one to he who calls and also to others who hear the call. “Costly grace is the hidden treasure in the field, for the sake of which people go and sell with joy everything they have. It is the costly pearl, for whose price the merchant sells all that he has.… It is the call of Jesus Christ which causes a disciple to leave his nets and follow him.… It is costly, because it calls to discipleship; it is grace, because it calls us to follow Jesus Christ. It is costly, because it costs people their lives; it is grace, because it thereby makes them live.… Above all, grace is costly, because it was costly to God, because it costs God the life of God’s Son and because nothing can be cheap to us which is costly to God” (DBWE 4: 44, 45). Costly grace leads one through the cross to resurrection.                                                              Grace is free but not cheap. It is a gift unbidden and undeserved. Grace is costly because it demands surrender, sacrifice, and obedience. Jesus said, “If any want to become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me. For those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake will find it. For what will it profit them if they gain the whole world but forfeit their life? Or what will they give in return for their life?” (Matthew 16:24-26) Bonhoeffer put it even more starkly: “When Jesus calls a person, he bids that one come and die.”                                                              A priest friend of mine was fond of reminding us at every turn that it’s easy to be a fan of Jesus; it’s hard to be a disciple. Real grace, authentic grace, costly grace is demanding; it requires commitment. Counterfeit grace leaves us feeling good without being good. Costly grace lifts us up into authentic humanity; cheap grace leaves us sedated but not healed.                                                                                                                                                                             Fritz
 

The story we tell and treasure among ourselves at this time of year is a story of migrants. It is the story of peasants driven by                     the demands of an Empire utterly indifferent to their particular circumstances or                               well-being. It is a story that, despite our                               best efforts (spoiler alert: there is no cozy                               stable, no friendly animals, and no little                               drummer boy), cannot be romanticized                               into sweetness, but is a tale of hardship                               and risk.                                                                                                 It is actually two stories with two different                                  but related villains. Luke tells of Emperor                                  Augustus, who despite his remoteness,                                  can by mere decree compel a young                                  woman to make an arduous 100 mile trek                                  over rough and dangerous terrain while                                  carrying a near full-term pregnancy. Matthew relates a different tale, of King Herod, a petty dictator tolerated by his Roman                                  over-lords. Herod’s legendary paranoia                                  and tyrannical rule result in the flight of                                  the holy family, seeking asylum in Egypt of                                  all places.                                                                                                            Displacement is what happens to poor                                  and powerless people in the Bible on a                                  regular basis. Jacob and his tribe end up                                  in Egypt trying to escape drought. Generations later their fate is slavery. Elimilech                                  and Naomi likewise seek to escape famine,                                  migrating to Moab and making a life there                                  that will include a Moabite named Ruth.                                  The Assyrians destroy Samaria and the                                  Northern Kingdom, banish the inhabitants, and transplant settlers loyal to the                                  empire. And of course, Babylon will follow and defeat Assyria, and ultimately destroy Jerusalem, the Temple, and every                                  social institution, imposing on Judah the                                  great catastrophe of Exile .                                                                                                            Through all the heartbreaking experiences of displacement, believers – Jews and                                  Christians – are strictly enjoined to have                                  special regard for the                         gerim                        (a Hebrew                                  word variously translated: sojourner,                                  stranger, alien, immigrant), that is for                                  those outsiders who happen by choice or                                  circumstance to be among us. The                         ger                        is                                  not to be despised or exploited, but rather                                  included in the community and offered                                  hospitality. The alien, along with  he widow and orphan, are entitled to the gleanings from the field. They shall not be deprived of justice. Indeed, they shall be                                  loved because (1) God loves them, and (2)                                  because God loved us when we were                                  slaves (slavery being the opposite pole                                  from hospitable treatment). Moses puts it                                  succinctly (Deut. 10:17 -19):                         For the LORD                                              your God is God of gods and Lord of                                  lords, the great God, mighty and awesome, who is not partial and takes no                                  bribe, who executes justice for the orphan                                  and the widow, and who loves the                                  strangers, providing them food and clothing. You shall also love the stranger, for                                  you were strangers in the land of Egypt.                                  This text, it seems to me, is only a short                         step from Jesus’ own radical injunction to                                     love our enemies.                                                                                                                      Admittedly, a few proof-texts cannot solve                                     our current immigrant / border control                                     issues. However, we can derive an orientation that clarifies what is permissible and                                     is useful. For instance, any policy that neglects compassion and relies on and promotes fear, suspicion, and hate toward                                     migrants violates the spirit of our most                                     deeply held religious beliefs. Likewise,                                     any practice that utilizes children as a deterrent and justifies making children into orphans is not worthy of support or consideration. As the storm clouds gather at our southern border and the                                     situation careens toward lethal force – an impending massacre looming that seems desired by some - it would be                                     well to remember that the lord of the universe was born far from home in an alley, a migrant whose first bed was                                     an animal’s feeding trough, because there was no room for them in the inn.                                                                                                                                                               Fritz
 

The Renaissance emerged from the High Middle Ages beginning in the 14th Century.                     Centered initially in Florence, its influence                               rippled to every corner of Europe and permeated every human pursuit: art, music,                               architecture, literature, economics, politics,                               war, science, philosophy, religion. Some of                               the greatest figures in Western Civilization                               were associated with the Renaissance: Dante, Petrarch, Leonardo, Michelangelo, Machiavelli, Dürer, Galileo, Copernicus, and                               many, many more. Less a movement than                               an ethos, the diverse Renaissance personalities shared a common inspiration: the recovery of Greek and Latin classics. The motto of the Renaissance became                       ad fontes                      : “to                               the sources!” The way forward – they insisted - the flowering of European culture, the                               “new birth” was possible only through a                               recovery of classical wisdom.                                                                                                 Luther was not a Renaissance scholar; rather he was trained in the prevailing scholastic tradition of the Church. However,                         ad                                                           fontes                        had a particular resonance for him:                                  Instead of Greek and Roman classicism, “to                                  the sources” meant back to Scripture and to                                  Augustine. Calvin, as a lawyer, was more                                  thoroughly immersed in Renaissance humanism than the German monk. (His first                                  book, for example, was a commentary on                                  the great Latin writer Seneca’s De Clementia). But following Luther he came to see                                  “the sources” as the Bible and the works of                                  Augustine. For both Luther and Calvin the                                  Church had gone off its rails and any hope                                  of restoration required reaching back for a                                  usable past. All of the reformers, in spite of                                  their many and passionate differences, had                                  this in common, that the way forward had                                  its origin in the first principles articulated in                                  a classic age.                                                                                                            The Reformers were committed to a fresh                                  start, a foundation laid bare and ready for                                  new structures to be built, bedrock freed                                  from centuries of accretion. They were, in a                                  word, radicals (from the Latin radix meaning “root”) – that is, those determined to                                  return to the root of the matter and only                                  then to proceed from there. They thought                                  that returning                         ad fontes                        – to the Bible preeminently, and to a few early saints, especially the Bishop of Hippo – would free                                  them for the constructive task of faithful                                  living. If they, in turn, stumbled along the                                  way, we should not forget that at their best                                  they also pointed to a Savior more radical                                  than we usually admit.                                                                                                            To bear in self-identification the name                                  “Christian” is to be rooted in the one who is                                  the way, the truth, and the life, to draw our                                  sustenance from him, to find in him a clarity                                  and purpose obscured and distorted in the                                  world. To follow him is to find ourselves                                  witnesses to extravagant forgiveness of the                                  blatantly unworthy, promiscuous association with obvious undesirables, and fierce                                  rejection of the conventionally pious. To be                                  in his presence is to hear the call to love                                  God, to renounce self, to turn the other                                  cheek, to love our enemies. To receive his                                  grace is to know ourselves to be, in fact,                                  lost sheep and prodigal sons.                                                                                                            The temptation of every Christian is to domesticate Jesus, to reduce him to someone                                  palatable and                                                      manageable and convenient.                                  But Jesus will not be so tamed. He would                                  sooner go to a cross. Jesus is perhaps “too                                  radical for Georgia,” but to those who are                                  being called, those who have ears to hear,                                  he is our root, our source. By returning to him we find our true identity and by proceeding from him we find our vocation in the world. While all the                                  world can see is a radical as extremist who disrupts the status quo, we are rooted in the radical who as an act of                                  mercy and of love promises not to leave the world as it is, but to make all things new.                                                                                                                         Fritz
 

It was not too long ago that the so-called                     “new atheists” – people like Sam Harris, Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, and Christopher                               Hitchens - were prominent on the talking                               heads circuit, their anti-religion message resonating in an era of religiously inspired terrorism and Evangelical bluster. Debates with the                               self-appointed protectors of religion (meaning                               Christianity) and a spate of best-sellers put                               them in the spotlight for a brief time. Looking                               back, it appears that they came and went like                               the flavor of the week. What remains is the                               status quo ante: a surfeit of gods, each one                               clamoring for our attention and loyalty.                                                                                                 In short, the challenge that persists in and                                  around the church is not the new flash-in-the-pan atheism, but rather the age-old glut of                                  gods. After all, the First Commandment is not                                  “You shall believe in me,” but rather, “you shall                                  renounce all other gods.” The task of faithful                                  people is not artfully to arrange a hierarchy of                                  greater and lesser loyalties, but rather to love                                  God with all our heart and soul and strength,                                  a love so complete there is no room for any                                  other. Whether in the Israel of Deuteronomy,                                  or the Wittenberg of Luther, or the Geneva of                                  Calvin, or even the Cobb County of 21st century America the problem is the same: how do                                  we remain faithful to the one, true God and                                  reject the seductions of the many other deities                                  who would enroll us in their idolatries and so                                  subvert our faith. We may inscribe the slogan                                  “in God we trust” on our money and on our                                  license plates, but the counter-question is,                                  ”Which god?”                                                                                                            Luther, in his Large Catechism, puts the matter                                  succinctly: “God is that in which we are to                                  look for all good and in which we are to find                                  refuge in all need. Therefore, to have a god is                                  nothing else than to trust and believe in that                                  one with your whole heart. As I have often                                  said, it is the trust and faith of the heart alone                                  that make both God and an idol. If your faith                                  and trust are right, then your God is the true                                  one. Conversely, where your trust is false and                                  wrong, there you do not have the true God.                                  For these two belong together, faith and                                  God. Anything on which your heart relies                                  and depends, I say, that is really your God.”                                                                                                            Calvin agrees, and goes further: “. . . [human]                                  nature, so to speak, is a perpetual factory of                                  idols.” In spite of the                                                      grace that flows into our                                  lives, we are constantly tempted to invest our                                  love and commitment in things and ideas and                                  practices that cannot sustain their devotion.                                                                                                            The outcome of our situation - being drawn                                  to God and being, at the same time, prone to                                  idolatry - is that we increasingly have difficulty                                  distinguishing between the one, true God                                  and the gods of our own creation. Our trust is                                  more likely in the world’s largest economy                                  than in the God who demands we care for                                  the poor. Our reliance is in the might of                                  world’s most richly funded and equipped military rather than in the God who calls us not                                  to victory but to sacrifice, and promises to be                                  with us. Perhaps most insidiously, we are                                  most enthusiastic toward all who promise to                                  satisfy our desires and our hearts cling to any                                  who will assure us of our own essential goodness (and therefore our deservedness). In fear                                  or uncertainty or in fevered narcissism we                                  seek out gods who will serve us, satisfy us,                                  comfort us. Like the ancient Israelites and                                  their golden calf, we are fully capable of creating our own gods, all decked out in red,                                  white, and blue: gods who will gladly fawn                                  over us, justify any behavior, assure us of our                                  inherent superiority, if we will only give up                                  our loyalty.                                                                                                            The antidote to our idolatry is remembrance.                                  Moses, giving his last advice to the Israelites                                  before they cross over the Jordan, repeatedly                                  calls them to remember who God is by remembering what God has done. By refusing                                  to forget, by ritualizing remembrance (see                                  Deuteronomy 6:4-9), the people may resist the constant inclination to idolatry, and prosper in the presence of God. For us, remembrance focuses on the ritual of                                  story and the table: “Do this in remembrance of me,” Jesus says, while at the same table we affirm a summary of the                                  story: “Christ has died; Christ is risen; Christ will come again.” To know the one, true God, the God of Abraham and Sarah, the God of Moses, the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, we must remember the story of Jesus. This is the                                  essence of Christianity, that we are formed by the story of the one we call Lord and that we tell the story in word and                                  deed in the world. It is this simple repetitive act of rehearsal, in worship and devotion and prayer, in our going out and                                  our coming in, that will guard us and free us from the clutches of the false gods that roam the land. Do you know the                                  story? Can you tell it to your grandchildren?                                                                                                                          Fritz
 

Once upon a time the word “politics” signified “the art or science of government” (Merriam-Webster). Now it is                     commonly a term of derision. The use of                       “politics” today implies manipulation, dishonesty, and other scurrilous behaviors.                                  “Playing politics” means maneuvering for                                  personal advantage. An unscrupulous politician is a redundancy. Politics is polarizing,                                  divisive, distasteful – best not talked about                                  in polite company. Our national founders                                  feared the turn toward political party as the                                  sectarian end to true democracy (although                                  it wasn’t long before there were Federalists                                  and Jeffersonians heaping calumny on                                  each other).                                                                                                            Religion is, likewise, a potentially inflammatory term, best kept to oneself. This is the                                  Enlightenment solution to generations of                                  bloody and destructive religious conflict:                                  privatize religion, making it a matter of personal choice and preference, untouchable                                  from the outside, and hence free.                                                                                                            The problem is that the more we marginalize these two areas of passion – religion                                  and politics – the more dangerous they become, festering in the darkness when they                                  might better serve us in the light. Each                                  comes to occupy a tyrannical and authoritarian place, unchallenged and unchallengeable, carefully enshrined in an echo                                  chamber of one’s particular ideological                                  bent. Indeed, we often fail to see how sickly                                  and insubstantial our own convictions are                                  until they are exposed to the full light of                                  day.                                                                                                            I know that one widely held conviction is                                  that we should keep politics out of the                                  church. My simple proposal runs in just the                                  opposite direction: I believe that our church                                  should be a place where free and passionate political discussion occurs as a matter of                                  course. The payoff for such an unconventional commitment would be two-fold: a                                  benefit to our fellowship in that we could                                  finally express what we have heretofore                                  kept carefully suppressed; and a benefit to                                  each other and the society we keep as we                                  practice and model civil and engaged exchange. We might even rehabilitate                                  “politics” itself.                                                                                                            Two things will be necessary for such a                                  change to take place. First, we will need to                                  trust each other – trust that the goal is not                                  defeat of an opponent, but rather mutual, if                                  slow, progress toward the truth. Second,                                  we will need to improve our political and                                  theological literacy. Repeating ideological                                  talking points designed to reinforce the                                  convictions of true believers will be totally                                  inadequate for engaging those who have a                                  different starting point and a different                                  world view. In short, we will need to learn                                  how to make arguments that might convince rather than bludgeon; we will have                                  to learn again how to offer personal testimony rather than calling down revealed                                  truth. In the church, the structure of such                                  arguments might be: “Because I believe this                                  [theological claim], I affirm/support that                                  [policy or program].”                                                                                                            I have been told that “everyone knows                                  where I stand [politically].” I doubt it. While                                  I have not hidden my disdain for the present administration, no one has inquired                                  about my particular objections or why I                                  hold them;                                  nor has anyone challenged my views, or tried to open my mind to some more adequate truth. It may be polite                                  to pass off everything as “You believe what you believe, and I’ll believe what I believe . . .” but it surely is not a                                  recipe for Christian fellowship. We                                  owe each other more than an empty tolerance.                                                                                                            Let’s talk!!                                                                                             Fritz
 

Moving is hell. But it is not punishment. Neither God nor the Devil has any need to afflict                     us during a move. There may be the occasional annoyances orchestrated by junior                               demons, but experienced tempters know                               when to step back and watch (so says C. S.                               Lewis). Moving is hell. But it is a hell almost                               entirely of our own making. Like Jacob Marley we have forged, link by link, the chains                               that now bind us. The physical challenges,                               the emotional assaults, and the spiritual anomie all are rooted in choices we have made                               over years, or even decades.                                                                                                 Recently Ann and I had begun seriously contemplating moving out of the Columbia Seminary home provided for us. We loved our                                  house, our neighborhood, and our proximity                                  to CTS and our friends on faculty and staff.                                  But Ann had always wanted a house of her                                  own – and neither of us is getting any                                  younger. Our reasoning was straight forward: someone else – a new professor and                                  family, for instance – should benefit from a                                  residence in one of the excellent school districts in the state (as we did with Gabe). In                                  addition, mortgage rates had begun climbing. Now seemed like the right time. With the                                  help of some realtor friends, we made our                                  way through the morass of home buying,                                  visiting and evaluating potential sites, making                                  offers, and finally closing on a townhouse                                  nearby.                                                                                                            Our move seemed so simple at the beginning. We were not downsizing appreciably.                                  Since the new is only 4 miles from the old, we                                  thought we might simply transfer much of                                  our stuff from one to the other, skipping the                                  packing step. None of it really worked the                                  way we envisioned it. New kitchen cabinets                                  took some time and are only now receiving                                  finishing touches. Comcast TV and internet was supposed to be easily installable, but instead required service visits.                                  My car flashed an engine light and required me to spend a morning and then                                  a day waiting for repair. While square f                                  ootage is comparable, the space is allocated so differently that simple transfer                                  was not realistic. After establishing patterns over 13 years, now we have to                                  rethink what goes where. Fortunately,                                  we have leniency from CTS and can take                                  whatever time we need.                                                                                                            The problem with any move is, candidly                                  put, stuff – the stuff we have accumulated almost imperceptibly over the days                                  and years. Contrast Jesus, who sent out                                  the Twelve and “ordered them to take                                  nothing for their journey except a staff;                                  no bread, no bag, no money in their                                  belts; but to wear sandals and not to put                                  on two tunics.” (Mark 6:8-9). Jesus                                  warned his auditors that nothing is                                  more spiritually dangerous than the stuff                                  with which we fill our lives, that possessions possess us, “for where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” (Matthew 6:20).                                                                                                            Our move has revealed a side to me that                                  I do not like to acknowledge, and manage most of the time to keep even from                                  myself. I have too many books, too many                                  movies, too many CDs. I have too many                                  clothes. We keep too much food in our                                  large refrigerator and our walk-in pantry. I am a model of socially acceptable                                  excess. I have become skilled in finding                                  ways to fit more and more into diminishing space, while ignoring any reasonable divestment. Beneath a thin façade of moderation is an indulgence and glut that cannot be pleasing                                                      to God.                                                                                                            Theologically speaking, moving is a call to repentance, an invitation to change our lives, an opportunity to turn                                                      from what burdens us, and instead, to simplify our lives. I for one intend to answer that call.                                                                   Fritz
 

There are many things to celebrate and                     many ways to do it on July 4th. For some it                               is a welcomed mid-summer break; for others a family party; for still others a community festival. At its base, however, we would                               do well to remember that we are celebrating not our actual independence from British rule, but rather our declaration to that                               effect. The founders did not designate the                               capitulation of Cornwallis at Yorktown                               (September 3) or the ratification of the                               Treaty of Paris (January 14) – the military                               and political ends of the Revolution – as                               Independence Day. Instead, they chose the                               day when colonial representatives announced their freedom from colonial rule                               as an idea and a fact. Colonists were independent of British rule, they insisted, on the                               basis of mere assertion. With “repeated injuries and usurpations,” the King had descended into a despotism and tyranny that                       not only justified but even necessitated dissolving the political bands binding colonists                                          with motherland. Seven more years of conflict would be required to turn declaration                       into reality. Indeed, some historians argue                                  that America would be finally free of British                                  rule only after the successful conclusion of                                  the War of 1812.                                                                                                            We should not underestimate how dangerous this idea of independence is. John Calvin insisted to his dying day that there was                                  no right inherent in faithful citizenry to                                  overthrow a ruler, even a despotic one.                                  When his fellow French Protestants – undergoing brutal persecution - sought his                                  advice, Calvin could only offer two choices:                                  martyrdom or flight into exile; deposing a                                  lawfully established ruler was not an option. Calvin’s younger colleague, John                                  Knox, himself an exile from the Marian                                  persecutions in England, had a different                                  idea. Knox argued that neglect of the                                  gospel mandates or abuse of one’s position (which were for him two sides of                                  the same coin) was justification for faithful resistance and even revolution. What                                  Calvin thought unthinkable, Knox promoted as not only possible but necessary; it was the duty of the faithful to                                  secure fidelity in leadership. Thus, Knox                                  could harass the young Scottish Queen,                                  the Catholic Mary Stuart, right out of                                  Scotland. For Knox no political leader                                  has legitimacy simply on the basis of                                  birth or position, but only on his or her                                  conformity to the gospel. Similarly, no                                  subject is under obligation to an unfaithful leader; just the opposite, subjects have a duty to expose, punish, and                                  even depose such leaders. Ordinary                                  people may stand in judgment of their                                  rulers. Their difference on this crucial                                  point drove a wedge between Calvin                                  and Knox that was never reconciled.                                                                                                            The American Revolution was possible                                  not in Calvin’s terms, but only as a Knox-inspired rebellion. It is no accident that                                  many of the most outspoken proponents of independency were Scottish                                  and Northern Irish immigrants who                                  combined no great love for England                                  with a pro-revolutionary religious fervor.                                  Among the most vociferous was the                                  famed Scottish preacher and president                                  of the fledgling Presbyterian school in                                  Princeton, John Witherspoon. The only                                  clergy-person to sign the Declaration,                                  Witherspoon was a tireless agitator for American separation (and a special target of British wrath), justifying his position and exhorting others from every                                  pulpit to which he was invited.                                                                                                            One of the ironies of revolution, whatever their initial justification, is that once the revolutionaries seize power,                                  their objective inevitably shifts to securing their own right to rule. In different ways this has been true of the                                  American, French, and Russian revolutions as well as the colonial rebellions of the 19th and 20th Centuries. Successful revolutionaries become custodians of power, admitting only to the need for occasional reform which will                                  not threaten their entrenched position. In short, revolutions become domesticated; then they become the status                                  quo; and then they descend into mundane corruption. Perhaps on this 4th we should remember the bold claims                                  of self-governance articulated in the Declaration, but also another of Jefferson’s words (in a letter to James Madison): “I hold it that a little rebellion now and then is a good thing, and as necessary in the political world as                                  storms in the physical.”                                                                                                                         Fritz
 

There's nothing you can do that can't be done.                                                                               Nothing you can sing that can't be sung.                                                                               Nothing you can say, but you can learn                                                                               How to play the game                                                                               It's easy.                                                                               All you need is love . . .                                                                          By 1967, The Beatles had become worldly                     wise, perhaps even a little bit cynical. They                               were certainly not any longer the artists of                       I                                                      Want to Hold Your Hand                      and                       Please Please                                                      Me                      . In the summer of 1967, between                       Sgt.                                                      Pepper’s                      and the so-called                       White Album                      , they                               released a non-album single,                       All You Need Is                                                      Love                      . Far from a paean to the power of love                               (as some commentators would have it, ignoring every musical and lyrical cue),                       All You                                                      Need                      is ruthless satire, mocking the idea of                               self-sufficient love. From the pretentious sample of                       La Marseillaise                      that opens the song, to                               the sneering brass on each chorus, to Paul’s                               exhortation near the end for everybody to                               join in, to the reference to                       Yesterday                      and                       She                                                      Loves You                      , to the lyrics of limitation, the song                               is testimony to what love cannot do. The                               cloying sentimentality of popular notions of                               love will no longer do. It’s not that easy.                                                                                                 By way of contrast, one might consider the                                  Biblical view of love. There we find love of                                  God as a commandment and love of neighbor as its corollary. Throughout the Biblical                                  traditions love is not a feeling or an idea, but                                  rather a commitment and an action. Love is                                  what you do – and it’s far from easy.                                                                                                            Love in this sense is not caught like a virus;                                  nor does one fall into it. Rather, love is exemplified by God and instilled by the Holy Spirit.                                  Love cannot be earned or deserved; it can                                  only be gratefully received and freely given.                                  God is the source of love, and in divine loving                                  sets us free as only the beloved can be free to                                  be loving as well. First John insists that because God is love, both the beginning and                                  end (the alpha and omega) of love is God.                                  Thus love is not primarily a philosophical                                  idea, or a sociological construct, or a psychological phenomenon, but rather a theological                                  revelation. God is known – and desires to be                                  known - in divine acts of love which are expressed in self-sacrifice, in choosing to side                                  with the needy against the self-sufficient, and                                  in speaking the truth. We see these attributes                                  embodied in Jesus who is the epitome of self-sacrifice, whose ministry focuses on the sick,                                  the demon-possessed, the poor, and the marginalized, and who himself is the way, the                                  truth, and the life. Torah repeatedly affirms                                  that as an  expression of God’s love there is                                  special divine concern for widows, orphans,                                  and sojourners (this last sometimes translated                                  “aliens” or “strangers”) – that is, those who                                  have no standing in society must receive determined care because they are the ones with                                  whom God has chosen to stand in their need                                  and vulnerability. God does so not because                                  they are particularly lovable or deserving but                                  because God’s chief attribute is “                         hesed                        ”, a                                  complex Hebrew word which the King James                                  translators rendered “Steadfast love” but                                  which also carries the idea of covenant loyalty. God, it is often said, abounds in steadfast                         love, but that love is persistent and enduring                                     even when met with the frequent hurtful cases of unfaithfulness.                                                                                                                      The apostle Paul’s brief meditation on love                                     which is now one of the most familiar texts of                                     the Bible – misapplied regularly in weddings –                                     also emphasizes the sacrificial character of                                     love, its perseverance, the need love yearns to                                     address, and its ties to the truth. While nothing could be further from the apostle’s mind than a couple entering wedded bliss, his view of love is entirely in keeping with the Hebrew/Old Testament view                                     of love which was his heritage. Then he goes further: God’s love comes to us not when we have turned the corner or come to our senses, but while we were weak, even ungodly, sinners at enmity with God. The formula                                     holds: God loves the poor, the stricken, the marginal, the broken, the struggling, the foolish, even the enemy –                                     and as God’s people in the world so should we. Love one another; Love your neighbor; Love your enemy. It isn’t                                     easy. It’s certainly not romantic. (Everybody sing!) It is, however, work of the most vital kind. Indeed, it is the way                                     of the pilgrim in this world, going out from God filled and overflowing with blessing only to end up where God                                     is. We have been made, Augustine writes, for God, and our hearts are restless to they find their rest in him.                                                                                                                                     Fritz
 

In Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania circa 1970, Jesus                     was in the air. Jesus freaks – shaggy boys and                               earth-mother girls – were sidewalk evangelists, passing out tracts and confronting any                               who would listen with the need and possibility of salvation. Church youth groups and                               Young Life chapters were burgeoning with                               teenage boomers. The musical Godspell had                               originated as a master’s thesis at Carnegie                               Mellon University; and                       Jesus Christ Superstar                                                     was seen for the first time on stage by an audience of 13,000 at the Civic Arena. I began                               my sophomore year that September at Bethel                               Park High.                                                                                                 It was a formative time for any teenager, an                                  impressionable time – and I was impressed                                  by                         Jesus Christ Superstar.                        I was not alone.                                  Following the success of the Who’s                         Tommy                        ,                                  Decca Records was bold enough to release a                                  double disc concept album by unknowns                                  about the last days of Jesus. Even Decca did                                  not expect what happened: the album                                  soared up the Billboard charts, finishing 1971                                  as the number one album of the year, ahead                                  of such enduring classics as                         All Things Must                                                           Pass,                                     Tapestry                        ,                         Sticky Fingers                        , and                         Pearl.                        There                                  followed stage productions on Broadway                                  and the West End, and then around the                                  world; and there was a major Hollywood                                  movie filmed on location in Israel. Of course,                                  there was also backlash: charges of sacrilege,                                  outraged cries of blasphemy, and album                                  burnings. But no protests could eclipse the                                  fact that millions of children and young                                  adults learned Tim Rice’s lyrics by heart, and                                  many came to understand the gospels                                  through the frame of                         Jesus Christ Superstar                        .                                                                                                            I was reminded of my debt to Lloyd Weber                                  and Rice watching the excellent NBC production this Easter Sunday. After all these years                                  of study and devotion, I was still rapt from the                                  opening guitar licks to the closing credits. My                                  favor was more than mere nostalgia or sentimentality. Tim Rice, the lyricist, captured                                  the gospel in a way enduringly compelling to me these many years on.                                                                                                            The key decision was not to base the                                  story on a particular canonical gospel                                  (like Godspell did with Matthew) but                                  rather to approach the drama from Judas’ perspective. Judas thus is elevated                                  from a few lines in the canon to the                                  sympathetic, central character, caught                                  between his admiration for Jesus and                                  his devotion to the movement: “Jesus! /                                  You've started to believe / The things                                  they say of you / You really do believe /                                  This talk of God is true / And all the                                  good you've done / Will soon be swept                                  away / You've begun to matter more /                                  Than the things you say.” Ultimately,                                  this Judas will betray Jesus not out of                                  greed but out of loyalty to the cause he                                  thinks Jesus now endangers. Tragically,                                  he discovers that the man and the message cannot be so easily disentangled;                                  nor can his devotion to one be separated from the other. In the end Judas cries                                  out bitterly to God, half in confession                                  and half in accusation: “My mind is darkness now / My god I am sick / I've been                                  used / And you knew / All the time /                                  God I'll never ever know / Why you                                  chose me for your crime / For your foul                                  bloody crime / You have murdered                                  me! / You have murdered me!” (The                                  chorus sings in the background, “So                                  long, Judas / Poor old Judas.”)                                                                                                            Jesus, in this telling, has paid the price                                  for popularity. Everyone wants some                                  piece of him: the sick want to be healed;                                  the disciples want their place in the sun;                                  the crowds want a spectacle; the zealots                                  want his endorsement of their revolution; the priests want a scapegoat. Seen from the perspective of Gethsemane, Jesus struggles with doubt: “I only want to say / If there is a way / Take this                                  cup away from me / For I don't want to taste its poison / Feel it burn me, / I have changed I'm not as sure / As when                                  we started / Then I was inspired / Now I'm sad and tired / Listen surely I've exceeded / Expectations / Tried for three                                  years / Seems like thirty / Could you ask as much / From any other man?” Nevertheless, doubt finally gives way to                                  petition and petition to (re)commitment: “Show me there's a reason / For your wanting me to die / You're far too                                  keen on where and how / But not so hot on why / Alright I'll die! / Just watch me die!”                                                                                                            JCS ends with crucifixion and an implied burial; there is no Easter. Instead, there is the perennial question of followers: how does one love the leader? Mary Magdalene acknowledges her struggle early: “I don't know how to love                                  him / What to do, how to move him / I've been changed, yes really changed / In these past few days / When I've                                  seen myself / I seem like someone else.” Fraught with sexual allusion, the song is ironically about a passion beyond                                  sexuality; if it were not, Mary implies, she would not be in the slightest confused. However, it is when part of the                                  song finds its way into Judas’ dying, guilt-ridden anguish that we can see it more thematically: “I don't know how to                                  love him / I don't know why he moves me / He's a man / He's just a man / He's not a king / He's just the same / As                                  anyone I know / He scares me so! / When he's cold and dead / Will he let me be? / Does he love me too? /                                  Does he care for me?”                                                                                                            Jesus may be a superstar in this drama, but he remains an enduring enigma whose death has often transcended                                  and sometimes even obscured his message. One reason that Jesus Christ Superstar endures – and 10 million viewers                                  tuned in to see – is that even though we know the ending, the aftermath, now stretching to two millennia, remains                                  cloaked in mystery. The whys of God’s particular choices remain inscrutable. Like Mark’s gospel, in which the men                                  forsake him and flee, and the women say nothing to anyone for they were afraid, still the word has gotten out. He                                  is risen. We are the living proof of this miracle.                                                                                                            Fritz
 
