27 April 2018

Resurrection…3 – Death and Resurrection


The third dimension of good news, resurrection news, according to Archbishop Rowan Williams, is about death.  You will perhaps forgive a little cynical story.  Some ministers, when first ordained and turned loose upon decent people… if they do some good, it may very well be a triumph of grace over stupidity.  It’s also smart, generally speaking, for parishioners to beware of ministers at this early stage if they have just read a book.  I had just read a new publication from a fine Lutheran teacher, Oscar Cullmann, and it was entitled, Immortality of the Soul or The Resurrection of the Body.  The book is somewhat dated now, but Cullmann makes an important point, very startling back then, that Christian scriptures do not teach what we call immortality.  This is indeed so, but as I found out it is tricky territory for the novice parish minister.

Rowan Williams however who is not a novice puts it quite bluntly:  Christians really ought to be much more critical than they often are of the idea that we survive death.  We don’t.  We die… and God restores our relationship with him.   Dr Williams says we don’t have a little bit of us called Immortal Soul which hangs on after death.  John Brown’s body lies a’mouldring in the grave, but his soul goes marching on…  This is the glib sentimentalism of many about death, including many Christian adherents.  We do not know what lies beyond death.  Neither, I may say, do atheists or anyone who insists, as though they have some special insight, that we return to the cosmic dust and there is nothing more to be said.  Resurrection people die in the confidence that, as with Jesus, life is transformed (“changed”, writes St Paul), and restored, and love is unbroken.  That is what we call resurrection.

Jesus repeatedly counselled us not to be afraid.  Why are you fearful?  And indeed a major consequence of a discipline of contemplative life and prayer is the calming, over time, of our most earnest inner fears – often simply variants of the fear of death.  The fear of defeat, for instance, of dying without having done what we thought we would or should do, or without having been able to repair what we damaged.  The fear of change, because I might not be able to cope with it.  The fear of powerlessness, perhaps, of not being there any more to influence what happens, not being present to others we’ve always been present to, not being able to make our will prevail any more… leaving it to others.  A dear church lady, within hours of death, and quite at peace with that, still thought it necessary to say, “Please tell those women to make sure someone gets the milk…” She meant, for the cup of tea after the funeral service.

Jesus’s resurrection says that God calls us through death to life.  I have no idea how.  But then, the process of growing and maturing in faith has become in numerous ways a process of unknowing, of choosing to be still, of trusting, relinquishing control... which includes not needing, necessarily, to understand.  We journey towards our own mortality in just the way Jesus did – in quiet trust.  It is as well to have as little unfinished business as possible, but sometimes that turns out to be a luxury too far.  Time or circumstances may mean there are still loose ends and unresolved issues.  In contemplative life and prayer we are always aware of our mortality.  We go on in company with the risen Christ and by faith in him.

Resurrection…2 – The world can change


The first dimension of resurrection truth in the 21st century, according to Rowan Williams, is that humans and humanity matter.  We visited that theme last week.  The second (and these themes certainly overlap) is that the world really can change.  One of the fascinating features of secular philosophy is the apparent commitment to not changing.  We have all met the person who takes pride in not changing.  There are people who claim that “some people”, especially certain offenders, “will never change” – and therefore should be locked away permanently or eliminated.  Human history up to the present day, it may seem in our gloomier moods, scarcely fills us with confidence that the world will ever change…

Jesus says otherwise.  Jesus’s resurrection is to say that God can turn human inevitability and human mortality and human history on its pivot (to borrow words from Rowan Williams) – it is to see that in all sorts of human situations it is possible for things to be different. 

Rowan Williams, who can be a little bit mischievous, then goes on to point out that this is why Christians so often turn out to be a nuisance – as Dr Williams himself was more than once, from his episcopal chair – a nuisance to people who want a tidy world.  The Roman Empire was a very efficient administration – so much so that it couldn’t find room for another vision of humanity which called for difference and a re-valuation of human dignity.  Christianity was a terrible nuisance also to Hitler and the Third Reich, as it was to Stalin, is now in China where the church is acceptable and permitted only as the state can control it.  Even in the UK or the USA the Christian prophetic resurrection voice is scarcely what the powerful want to hear or find comfortable.

It is because of the resurrection that Christians insist that things can be different.  In many cases this is because the believers have found that they themselves have been changed.  It is reinforced in many cases by the difference in values and attitudes they may see in their own families and tribal gatherings, between some who are resurrection people and some who are not, never think about it, ridicule it, or find it incomprehensible.  Indeed, there are some people who can’t and won’t change because of brain damage or psychological trauma of some kind – we assume then that we care for them, as and if we can, but certainly not traumatise them further. 

Yes, the world can change.  The Spirit of God, whom Jesus said would come, whom Jesus described memorably as the wind, blows through the ruins, creating, re-creating, enlivening, making all things new.  Resurrection people can see the signs of that.  The most powerful and movingly understated story of resurrection I ever encountered is[1] in German.  Nine-year-old Jürgen, in the rubble of Berlin, June 1945, is determinedly guarding the body of his 4-year-old brother.  “Why?” says a stranger who appears.  “Because of the rats,” says the little boy.  “But rats sleep at night,” says the stranger.  It’s a lie, as we know, but the stranger is able to persuade the boy to share some rabbit meat he has got, and some edible leaves growing up in the rubble.  And so they set off, towards the rising morning sun.



[1] Wolfgang Borchert: Nachts schlafen die Ratten doch.

13 April 2018

Resurrection…1 – Human beings matter


During Lent I returned to one of my best teachers, Rowan Williams,[1] and in particular his recent book, The Sign and the Sacrifice, the Meaning of the Cross and Resurrection.[2]  In the final chapter he lists five ways in which the resurrection of Jesus has deep meaning for our 21st century lives. My hope is to take one of these on each of the next five Fridays, the first one today.

First, he says …if Jesus is risen, there is a human destiny.  That is to say, there is a human worth and dignity, a purpose and an identity way beyond that assumed by the state or the secular culture.  The creator of our life proves to be also re-creator, making all things new.  Jesus is our sign that the dehumanising tyrannies of our day are not God’s last word on any person God has made.  The human race may have, and does have, a capacity for destructiveness and cruelty and for reducing this world to chaos and pain – Jesus tells another narrative.  In the lovely poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins:  There lives the dearest freshness deep down things.[3] 

And then, still struggling how to think, let alone write or teach clearly, or sensibly about resurrection, I was sent, on the 50th anniversary of his murder, this prophetic quote of Dr Martin Luther King.  I think it is from one of his sermons: When our days become dreary with low-hovering clouds of despair, and when our nights become darker than a thousand midnights, let us remember that there is a creative force in this universe, working to pull down the gigantic mountains of evil, a power that is able to make a way out of no way and transform dark yesterdays into bright tomorrows. Let us realize the arc of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice.

The lectionary for these Sundays in Easter provides epistle readings from the First Letter of John.  These are almost the last writings to make it into the canon of Christian scripture.  God is light, we read there, and in him is no darkness at all.[4]  If we are walking in the darkness, says John, we cannot claim to be in company with Jesus – we cannot be resurrection people.  But if we are walking in the light of resurrection, as Jesus is, we are in company with all others doing the same.  This is the new humanity.  We know who we are, and to whom we belong, in life and in death.

Another teacher, this one long ago and I have mentioned him before, was Dr Helmut Rex.  As Dr Helmut Rehbein, refugee pastor from Nazi Germany, he was received by the NZ church and obliged to change his name to Rex to avoid abuse and discrimination.  Dr Rex taught us Church History for 3 years.  His health had been broken by malnutrition and by Nazi abuse.  A brilliant scholar and a true disciple.  And one day he said in class (I am quoting from memory):  In prison, you know, it’s not very happy.  I was allowed a Bible, and that was good of course.  But the main thing at that time was my trust in resurrection.  Jesus lives.  Nazism cannot.  That is God’s signal to us.



[1] Former Archbishop of Canterbury, now Master of Magdalen College, Cambridge.
[2] Westminster John Knox Press, 2017.
[3] G M Hopkins: God’s Grandeur.
[4] I John 1:5ff

06 April 2018

He speaks her name…Easter 2018


Jesus said to her, “Mary!” She turned and said to him in Hebrew, “Rabbouni!” (which means Teacher).  Jesus said to her, “Do not hold on to me… (John 20:16-17)

It is tantalising how little we know about Mary Magdalene.  One of the three Marys… Mary his mother, Mary of Bethany (sister of Martha and Lazarus), and Mary of Magdala.  The idea that Mary Magdalene was a reformed prostitute is probably a silly libel – there is no primary source that says that about her.  What does seem sure is that she was one of Jesus’s disciples, just as were James and John, Peter or Andrew.  On the Easter morning, early it says, and still dark, she is at the tomb, sunk in grief, all the more because the tomb is empty.  Mary knows Jesus is dead.  She saw him die, she saw him buried.  Someone has stolen the body.  How will she ever cope with that?

Jesus says to her, “Mary”.  That is the first kairos in Mary’s Easter.[1]  He interrupts her grief and pain.  He calls her by name.  In her darkness and loss, she is addressed from the heart of God’s love, which is greater than death.  Such a kairos may happen to any of us in any of a myriad of ways, usually just as unobtrusive, through the events of life.  Dag Hammarskjöld[2] wrote in his journal at Pentecost 1961: I don't know Who, or what, put the question, I don't know when it was put.  I don't even remember answering.  But at some moment I did answer Yes to Someone, or Something, and from that hour I was certain that existence is meaningful and that, therefore, my life, in self-surrender, had a goal.  He knew himself addressed, by name, by risen love.

The second kairos is her response.  She turned and said to him “Rabbouni!” (which means Teacher).  That is the way she knew him – as her Teacher.  It may not seem to us like full-blown Easter faith, but it is perfectly fine that she sees Jesus in her own way, according to her own encounter, and in her own time.  In time to come the church would prescribe all manner of titles for Jesus, and exalted ways of responding to him, complete with incense.  I am content to be with Mary of Magdala, for whom he was, at least initially, Rabbi, Teacher.

The third kairos is when, understandably, she moves to keep him, embrace him.  The Greek verb used here means to take hold, possess.  But he is not available now to be enlisted, used, possessed, by the church or anyone.  Mary receives, accompanies the risen Jesus in the same way we do now – not by intellect or dogma or the most inspiring creed, but by the heart’s quiet response.  Her yes to Jesus is an answer of love.  She will learn to recognise his summons in time to come, in the varied circumstances of life and of death.  And he will call her through her own death.  She has encountered the love over which, as Paul put it, death has no dominionneither death nor life, nor angels, nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else.[3]



[1] Remember our Greek word kairos… it is the biblical word meaning a special moment, the moment that changes things, God’s moment, the moment of newness.
[2] Dag Hammarskjöld, Swedish Lutheran diplomat, Secretary-General of the United Nations, 1953-1961.
[3] Romans 8:38-39