Friday, November 4, 2011

Book of Faith - Luke 10:21-23 - Keeping the Light On

This week, the comment at the end of our Book of Faith discussion was that we only covered three verses.  However, the consensus was that our conversation was worth slowing down.  In reading this passage, what struck the group was that these three verses don't sound like Luke, they sound like John.  "No one knows who the Son is except the Father, or who the Father is except the Son and anyone to whom the Son chooses to reveal him."  A layer of interpretation seems to have been added.  Was this addition the original words of Jesus or did the interpretation come later in the life of the early church? 

Jesus speaks of things hidden from the wise and intelligent.  There were certainly those individuals who took those words and ran with them in the early church.  People began to speak of secret knowledge given only to those in the inner circle.  Those people were called Gnostics and the church viewed them as going too far down the road suggested by Jesus' words.  We always seem to get into trouble when we think we have figured God or Jesus out.  If the Eastern Church has taught us anything, it is to celebrate the wonder and mystery of God.  Rather than saying Jesus has secret knowledge that is passed on to his disciples, say that the Gospel is so surprising, so unexpected, so wondrous, that even the smartest people will not be able to understand or accept it.  In fact, even the disciples who knew Jesus, were taught by Jesus, traveled with Jesus, in the end, didn't understand.  And they, in the language of the passage, had the opportunity to see and hear what prophets and kings would have loved to see and hear.  In the end, their inside knowledge could not save them.  In the end, only the cross could save.  Secret knowledge does not open the gates of the Kingdom for us, only Christ. 

These observatons led to a discussion about being chosen, another wonder and mystery of God.  The logical step is to say that if God ultimately chooses some, then God ultimately rejects others.  Again, our temptation is to create a logical system.  Luther rejected a systematic approach.  For Luther, God always chooses us through grace.  If people stand outside the Kingdom, that is their action, not God's.  Luther's understanding is not wholly logical, but Luther argued it was the truth.  Again, the Eastern Church would declare that grace is a holy mystery to be embraced and celebrated rather than logically understood. 

This conversation led us back to the passage in Matthew where the one individual is tossed out to the marriage banquet because he is not wearing a wedding garment.  He chose not to wear a garment and is therefore responsible for being on the outside, but the passage does not say that he needs to remain outside forever.  The doors still stand open to him.  The invitation is still given.  The light remains on for him to return.  This is the note of God's grace. 

If the "light always stays on" with God, then we talked as a group about the ultimate meaning of the Kingdom of God.  Does the light stay on after death?  C.S. Lewis suggests such an idea in the Great Divorce.  Hell is a spreading metropolis, with everyone trying to get as far away from each other as they can.  Eventually, some people grow tired of Hell.  In the center of the city is a bus station and every day there is a bus to Heaven.  Every day there are people who make the trip (the light stays on) and every day there are people who get back on the bus, once they've been to heaven, and return to Hell.  C.S. Lewis' book is worth reading.  There is something powerful about the image of a gracious God who always keeping the light on, the door open.    

For those following this blog, the next one will be in two weeks.  At that time, we'll pick up where we left off.  Keep the conversation going.  Keep asking questions.  And keep reading the Bible.

Peace,
Pastor Summer

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I read the same passages and just read them as I would a book, without wondering about them. How do you teach yourself to read a passage and contemplate the meaning and what it means to you? I love reading the commentary in this blog, keep it going!