The Adventurous Lectionary – Pentecost 25 – November 6, 2016

The Adventurous Lectionary – Pentecost 25 – November 6, 2016 October 29, 2016

The Adventurous Lectionary – Twenty-fifth Sunday after Pentecost – November 6, 2016

Haggai 1:15b-2:9
Psalm 145:1-5, 17-21
2 Thessalonians 2:1-5, 13-17
Luke 20:27-38

“Now he is God not of the dead, but of the living; for to him all of them are alive,” so ends a cryptic exchange between Jesus and the Sadducees. Resurrection, rebirth, and renewal are at the heart of this week’s lectionary readings. There is a future and a hope ahead of us, regardless of how low we have sunk spiritually, personally, and institutionally. Where we see death, God sees the possibility of new life. Dry bones can live. Dead spirits can be born again.

You can’t get a complete systematic theology from Jesus’ exchange with the Sadducees. Rationalistic in spirit, the Sadducees doubted the concept of resurrection, the restoration of life to the whole person on the last day. Trying to discern Jesus’ theology of the afterlife – and even in the first century, Jewish intellectuals were well aware of the Platonic separation of soul and body and the afterlife adventures of the liberated soul – they ask him a curious question about marriage beyond the grave. Jesus, as often is the case, doesn’t give a definitive answer. He simply places the answer where it belongs, in the context of God’s graceful care for humankind. The dead will live on, God is the God of the living, and we will live on. The details of the afterlife are apparently unimportant; what matters is God’s fidelity and enduring love. God is alive, God is faithful, and it well with our souls.

This passage may be quite esoteric to many congregants today. Today, very few Christians have a literal doctrine – or even images – of the resurrection. Our post-mortem visions constellate on some form of immortality, either in heaven or a journey from life to life. We joke about bad karma, but seldom speak of hell. A literal restoration of our bodies, apparently on this planet, makes no sense and is seldom the focus of preaching in most mainline, progressive, and evangelical congregations. The idea of the dead emerging from the ground or being put back together supernaturally if the body has decomposed is the stuff of zombie movies, hardly to be taken seriously. Still, many congregants ponder what will happen at the hour of death, even if they don’t share these questions in church.

While we don’t fully know what Jesus had in mind with his response, his words can be an opportunity to reflect on survival after death and on human hope. The election will be on the horizon and there is anxiety in the air. In many ways, given the choices, there is serious worry that the future of the republic, not to mention the planet is at stake, especially given the denial of climate change by one of the candidates. The old order, as Bob Dylan averred, is rapidly changing – “the times they are a changin’” and we receive little solace as we image our planetary future.

We fear the fate of the earth and the process of dying far more than we fear death or the afterlife. Few pastors get much traction fanning the flames of hell, even in evangelical congregations. Yet, if we can consider the possibility of an afterlife, ethics suggest a connection between our actions in this life and our experiences beyond the grave. This need not be couched in terms of hell, but the reality of unresolved issues and personal identity, not to mention redemption of what has died in us relationally and spiritually in this lifetime.

Very few mainline or progressive pastors preach about the afterlife and this allows popular, but often superficial and polarizing, images to dominate their congregants’ visions of life after death. While no pastor can be definitive about the afterlife, he or she can reflect on various possibilities as they relate to this lifetime and assert that neither Jesus nor healthy Christian theology counsels us to disregard our obligations to care for this lifetime and the world in light of the afterlife. We are here and the world – us and our companions – is saved as much here as in an uncharted beyond. (For more on the afterlife, I suggest my short text, “From Here to Eternity: Preparing for the Next Adventure.”)

The passage from Haggai also gives us an image of hope. The decimated nation will return to its former glory; no better than that, injury will be healed, hope restored, forgiveness given, and new beginnings emerge. This will be the work of the faithful and active God visualized by the Psalmist. Thessalonians continues this hopeful vision: the fullness of Christ is on the way, do not be afraid, have faith in God, and all will be well. Our lives are in God’s hands, and so are our deaths, and God is faithful. We may experience cataclysms and threat but God is at work silently and persistently to defeat the powers of darkness. If we stand firm in our trust in God and live faithfully, the future will be filled with hope and not fear. While the author of 2 Thessalonians may have in mind a “second coming,” we can translate this passage to address our own faith in a time in which we experience threat to the predictable order of things and in which the very existence of planetary life is at risk through human folly, war making, and greed.

These passages do not counsel us to passivity or to sitting on the sidelines, letting God take care of the future. We are called to live faithfully, to act lovingly, and to care for the earth regardless of what the future brings. Faithfulness is not about a divine rescue operation but about becoming God’s companion through actions to save the world and bring justice and beauty to our companions. Heaven will take care of itself; our task is here on earth, undergirded by the trust that whatever the future brings, we are in God’s hands.

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Bruce Epperly is Pastor of South Congregational Church, United Church of Christ, Centerville, MA and a professor in theology, spirituality, and ministry at Wesley Theological Seminary, Washington DC. He is the author of forty books including “Becoming Fire: Spiritual Practices for Global Christians,” “Process Theology: Embracing Adventure with God,” “From Here to Eternity: Preparing for the Next Adventure,” and “Jonah: When God Changes.”


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