28 May 2021

Nicodemus – 28 May 2021

 

There was a Pharisee named Nicodemus, a leader of the Jews. He came to Jesus by night and said to him, “Rabbi, we know that you are a teacher who has come from God; for no one can do these signs that you do apart from the presence of God.”  Jesus answered him, “Very truly, I tell you, no one can see the kingdom of God without being born anew.”  Nicodemus said to him, “How can anyone be born after having grown old?  Can one enter a second time into the mother’s womb and be born? Jesus answered, “Very truly, I tell you, no one can enter the kingdom of God without being born of water and Spirit.  What is born of the flesh is flesh, and what is born of the Spirit is spirit.  Do not be astonished that I said to you, ‘You must be born anew.’  The wind blows where it chooses, and you hear the sound of it, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes.  So it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit.”  Nicodemus said to him, “How can these things be?”  Jesus answered him, “Are you a teacher of Israel, and yet you do not understand these things?” (John 3:1-10)

Born again, in protestantism at any rate, conjures up an emotional rite of passage, typically in adolescence, in which you are thought to give your heart to Jesus.  The Billy Graham crusades in NZ in the late 1950s made much of this.  I read about the last American President that he was born again… although it was scarcely apparent to me.  They seemed to assume this would resonate with the voters. 

The Greek anōthen (ἄνωθεν) means literally from above, but it can also mean anew, afresh, again.  Nicodemus himself initially understood it naively: Can one enter a second time into the mother’s womb and be born?  The crucial sentence here however is about the wind: The wind blows where it chooses, and you hear the sound of it, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes.  So it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit.  The problem with this is that it sounds so elemental.  Why would I want to be blown around by the wind, like leaves on the driveway?  The wind can be exciting, out on Kawau Bay, it may be, or on the South Col of Everest.  But we like having suitable shelter… “Sing out if you’re in a draught”… a draught was bad, to our parents’ generation, you might get a chill. 

This is where some of us find the Benedictines quite helpful.  One of the three pillars of the Benedictine approach is called in Latin conversatio.  It is an ongoing process of newness, day by day.  The wind is decidedly outside our control.  As Jesus pointed out, you can never be sure which direction it will blow in, or its strength, or how long it will last.  Even on a still morning, with Kawau Bay like glass, the air is moving.  At other times it may blow old stuff clean away.  Conversatio means standing in the wind, availability to change, making friends with difference, distinguishing risk from recklessness… there are times when it has meant making friends with the inevitable… or as the Japanese Emperor told his people in 1945, enduring the unendurable.  It is understanding that this is the wind of God’s Spirit, the Spirit of the Risen Christ.[1]  The newness continues each day… a new wisdom, a fresh insight, a rediscovery of something old, but now with new meaning or importance; some great hump from the past suddenly isn’t like that anymore…  Jesus was inviting Nicodemus, this leader of the Jews, to get out and stand in the wind.  Are you a teacher of Israel, and yet you do not understand these things?



[1] Interestingly, for Benedictines, this pillar of life, conversatio, stands alongside another pillar, stabilitas, stability – yet another illustration of the facility mature Christians develop, finding truth in what seems contradictory.

21 May 2021

New wine – 21 May 2021

 

…Parthians, Medes, Elamites, and residents of Mesopotamia, Judea and Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the parts of Libya belonging to Cyrene, and visitors from Rome, both Jews and proselytes, Cretans and Arabs -- in our own languages we hear them speaking about God's deeds of power."  All were amazed and perplexed, saying to one another, "What does this mean?"  But others sneered and said, "They are filled with new wine." (Acts 2:9-13)

Luke’s florid account of the Day of Pentecost reads like a holiday cruise brochure.  This bit about how people heard the preaching each in their own native language is surely not there to generate what pentecostalists call speaking in tongues – or any spiritual self-indulgence.  It is a picture of the wideness of the gospel, breaking particularly the bonds of Judaism, going out to the world despite different languages, cultures, religions, histories.  If you look at Luke’s list in detail, even Arabs (later Moslems) are in there, Greek and Roman too, black and white, friend and foreigner… I was interested in the phrase, the parts of Libya belonging to Cyrene.  Why was that spelled out?  Cyrene was a major Greek and then Roman city on the coast of Libya.  Simon of Cyrene was the man the Romans ordered to help carry Jesus’s cross.  There is a tradition that Luke, who wrote the Book of Acts, was the first Christian bishop of Cyrene – but then the Greek Orthodox Church thinks that was St Mark. 

Who knows…? the point is, the church is born in a collapse of their familiar order and certainty, the wind of God blows through the old systems...  All were amazed and perplexed, saying to one another, "What does this mean?"  But others sneered and said, "They are filled with new wine."  Well exactly, it was new wine.  Jesus had talked about that:  No one puts new wine into old wineskins; otherwise the new wine will burst the skins and will be spilled, and the skins will be destroyed.  But new wine must be put into fresh wineskins.  Just to confuse us, Luke has this curious little addition: No one after drinking old wine desires new wine, but says, “The old is good”.[1]  Luke, by the time he wrote what we are reading, had encountered the resistance of pious folk for whom “new” will always be suspect – the old is good, is what they say.

Well, new nevertheless is happening… bursting the old wineskins as always.  At age 86¾ I mainly sit back and watch it.  We are re-learning contemplative life and prayer… no longer as any sort of spiritual élitism… but accessible now whoever you are.  The new wine is no longer the preserve of the spiritual specialists and career mystics.  It is bringing people together, and we are finding truth and wisdom in silence and stillness, in learning anew to love and to receive love.  We are learning to follow Jesus where he is, which is abiding within us and among us, and in the present moment.  In the process we are finding new pathways, with worship, with people of other faiths or none.   We are pulling down walls.  We are keeping the faith in fresh ways, we are experiencing God’s fidelity to us, we are losing fear and gaining gifts of wisdom.  Filled with new wine is how it is.



[1] Matthew 9:17; Mark 2:22; Luke 5:37-39

14 May 2021

Deliver us from evil – 14 May 2021

 

I am not asking you to take them out of the world, but I ask you to protect them from the evil one (John 17:15).

The Gospel next Sunday is the middle part of Jesus’s great prayer of love and unity – John reports it in chapter 17.   And this is one sentence of it: I am not asking you to take them out of the world, but I ask you to protect them from the evil one.  That phrase, the evil one, does sound a bit medieval.  As we well know, the Lord’s Prayer says deliver us from evil.  But Matthew’s Greek actually says, rescue us from the evil one[1].  And in Luke’s Gospel, that phrase of the Lord’s Prayer is left out altogether[2]. 

The ancient writers certainly personified evil.  Jesus was tempted in the desert by Satan.  Martin Luther threw his inkpot at the Devil.  Christians today include many who believe in possession by evil spirits, and practise exorcism.  In the First Letter of Peter we have[3]: Like a roaring lion your adversary the devil prowls around, looking for someone to devour. Resist him…!  I am not about to talk like that, but we are surely blind if we do not see the multi-faceted reality of evil in our world, and if we fail to take it with seriousness… and if we assume that we ourselves are somehow untainted or immune.  It can indeed take possession of people and events.

Jesus prays that we may be protected from the evil one – certainly from being harmed, but equally if not more from becoming ourselves part of the subtleties of evil.  It is as though sensible efforts to be safe are not going to be enough.  Any experienced addict knows that’s true.  St Paul writes[4]: I can will what is right, but I cannot do it… the evil I do not want is what I do…  I delight in the law of God in my inmost self, but I see another law at war with the law of my mind, making me captive…  And if we don’t quite see ourselves as captive – not everyone is an addict -- we are affected all the same when we compromise what we know to be right, or collude even passively with community violence, crudity, deceit, racism, cruelty and abuse.  Our lifetime has seen dramatic, prolonged manifestations of gross evil, and even today there are apocalyptic clouds on the horizon.

Jesus prays that we will be protected.  Does he mean that nothing bad will happen to us?  If so, it’s a fairly forlorn prayer.  Living in the light is what he said, reflected in our opinions and attitudes and statements… in the words of the Prophet Micah[5], Doing justice, loving mercy, walking humbly… not only on the grand scale of world events, but also, and possibly first, on the level of family and tribe, friends and colleagues.  Our disciplines of silence and stillness are where we are equipped to live in peace and in truth, increasingly able to recognise when it is not so, sensitive to what is not right and is dishonouring the gift of life.  However we are praying, essentially we are joining that one eternal prayer of the risen Christ, in which he asks, not that we will be taken out of the world, but that we will be resistant to evil. 



[1] Matthew 6:13 - ἀλλὰ ῥῦσαι ἡμᾶς ἀπὸ τοῦ ⸀πονηροῦ.

[2] Luke 11:4

[3] I Peter 5:8

[4] Romans 7:18-23

[5] Micah 6:8

07 May 2021

Greater than our hearts – 7 May 2021

 

Little children, let us love, not in word or speech, but in truth and action. And by this we will know that we are from the truth and will reassure our hearts before him whenever our hearts condemn us; for God is greater than our hearts… (I John 3:19-20)

…from the Epistle for last Sunday.  It always impresses me, when we are reading in John’s First Letter, that we are hearing from the mature experience of second-generation Christian faith.  These people have lived through things we hope we will never see… and what we are reading reflects the way they came eventually to express their discipleship.  This brief passage tells us two things.  The first is that it is by love that we know we are true -- let us love, not in word or speech (only[1]), but in truth and action... and by this we will know that we are from the truth…  Truth and love have a close, mutually dependent relationship.  Truth without love – which we are often deluged with -- is at least incomplete, defective.  And the second thing is about guilt -- whenever our hearts condemn us… God is greater than our hearts.

One of the central contemplative tasks, whoever we are, is steady distancing from what our teachers call negative spirituality… teachers such as Laurence Freeman or Cynthia Bourgeault, Richard Rohr or Sarah Bachelard.  By negative spirituality we mean our fixation, and the church’s, on guilt, on unresolved sin, punishment and the fear of hell.  Many of us were brought up in the understanding that God is normally not very pleased with us, that suffering and adversity are payment for our sins, that we need regular remission of sin.  Well, yes indeed, sin and wilful rebellion against God is alive and well… and we see it rampant in racism, in greed and exploitation of people and resources, in violence and abuse, in the rape of the environment, in the misuse of privilege and power. 

But contemplative life and prayer, the contemplative approach to the scriptures, radically shifts the paradigm (to employ a modern cliché).  Those 1st and 2nd century Christians, who had endured all those sins and horrors, had learned that we are judged by love.  Luke tells us[2] how Jesus, in the house of Simon the Pharisee, was approached by a woman who knelt and washed his feet.  What the pharisees saw was a sinner and a defilement.  But Jesus said her sins are forgiven… why? because she loved much.  Peter writes: Keep love for one another because love covers a multitude of sins[3].

And so it is that we have always insisted that the only proper assessment or evaluation of meditation is the question: Are we becoming more loving, more receptive of the love we are offered, more capable of giving and understanding rather than judging or condemning…?  Are we understanding ourselves more compassionately, more understandingly?  God is greater than our hearts, greater than all our negativities. 



[1] “Only” is my addition – word  and speech too need to spring from love.

[2] Luke 7:47

[3] I Peter 4:7