"If
you have been raised with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ
is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things that are above,
not on things that are on earth, for you have died, and your life is hidden
with Christ in God." (Colossians 3:1-3)
You
have died. You have been raised. with Christ. Your life is hidden with Christ.
You are thus dead to Death and its power. You are free. Free from fear.
In
the death and resurrection of Jesus, Death itself was mortally wounded. Jesus’
death is the death of Death. The great Puritan theologian, John Owen, wrote a
book called The Death of Death in the Death of Christ. I would not agree with everything Owen wrote in his book,
but I love the title. In the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ the power
of Death has been emptied. Death has been emptied of its power over us. St Athansius, in On the Incarnation wrote, "by Christ death was destroyed". The
great Anglican priest and poet, John Donne, wrote in his meditation Death Be Not Proud a summary of how
Christians now live (or should) in the light of death because death no longer has power
over us. He wrote,
Death be not proud. Though some have called thee
mighty and dreadful, for thou art not so. For those whom thou thinkst thou dost
overthrow die not, poor death. Nor yet canst thou kill me.
Donne
ends with,
One short sleep past, we awake eternally, and
death shall be no more. Death, thou shalt die.
Because
we are united with Christ’s death, we too are dead to the power of Death and we
are free. Because we know that our life is hidden in the one whose Life is more
powerful than Death, we are free. Because we know that Christ has hold of us –
and Christ will not let go – we are free. We are free from the power of Death. It has no ultimate claim on us.
And so, we need
not live and act in fear of Death. And we need not try to appease the powers of Death, as humans have all too
often done, sacrificing others for our own sense of security.
The
idea of sacrificing to appease Death has a powerful hold on the human imagination. We see it in mythology in
the idea that if you sacrifice someone else the gods will be appeased and let
you live. But it’s not just mythology. It has been acted out in history. In the
Old Testament, time and again God tells Israel, “Do not sacrifice your children
the way your neighbors do." The ancient Carthaginians tossed their
children into the sacred fire, hoping that in doing so they might appease the
gods and buy some time against the Romans. The ancient Aztecs carved out the
hearts of their sacrificial victims to feed the gods and to buy themselves some
security.
But
we need to beware lest we pat ourselves on the back and say, “We don’t
sacrifice people. We don’t carve out their hearts on some sacrificial altar or
toss people into the fire.” If we are honest with ourselves, we need to
acknowledge that we have indeed offered up sacrificial victims
for our own security and way of life, hoping to stave off the power of Death.
We
sacrifice young people when we send them off as soldiers to offer life and limb
in battle on our behalf.
We
sacrifice innocent people who are killed in our wars. It is estimated that in
our current war(s) some 50 to 100 thousand innocent Iraqis, Afghans, and
others who just happened to get in the way of our sense of insecurity have been
killed by our bombs. We call it collateral damage. But, it is human sacrifice
for our security.
We
sacrifice criminals, hoping that if we kill the killers we might feel a bit
more safe. If that worked, Texas would be the safest state in the Union. Even
if it worked, we would have to ask ourselves if that is the kind of sacrifice
we want to offer – especially given the evidence that many truly innocent
people have ended up on death row.
We sacrifice refugees and other unwelcome "intruders" preferring that they suffer rather than risking the possibility that we might suffer on their behalf.
We sacrifice refugees and other unwelcome "intruders" preferring that they suffer rather than risking the possibility that we might suffer on their behalf.
We
sacrifice the unwelcome intruder of the womb, collateral damage of another kind.
The
cult of the gun that insists that anyone and everyone who wants to should have
access to guns designed to kill humans is another way we bow to Death.
Never mind if it means accepting gun violence in our society unparalleled anywhere except actual
war zones. And while many are sacrificed, the proliferation of guns has not made us feel more safe.
More
subtly, we sacrifice others in an economic system in which the rich get richer
and the poor get poorer and whole parts of the world suffer so our way of life
can be maintained.
The list could go on. There are many ways we sacrifice the lives and well-being of others so we can feel safer, so we can be more comfortable, so our wealth is not threatened. All because we fear Death more than we trust the God of Easter.
The list could go on. There are many ways we sacrifice the lives and well-being of others so we can feel safer, so we can be more comfortable, so our wealth is not threatened. All because we fear Death more than we trust the God of Easter.
The
sacrifice of Jesus was in one sense just another example of the sinful,
selfish, sacrificial bargain humans have made with Death. On Good Friday,
humanity sacrificed Jesus as we have always been willing to sacrifice some
other(s) for the people rather than risk the possibility that we might perish
(cf. John 11:50). But its deeper meaning was different. The sacrifice of Jesus
was not a sacrifice to appease God, let alone Death. Rather, God in Christ, offered
himself freely as a self-sacrifice to undo the hold Sin and Death have on us and our imaginations and to absorb and transform our death-dealing sinfulness. The
resurrection of Jesus has demonstrated that the old way of the world in which
violence and the sacrificing of others are seen as necessary is a dead end. The
resurrection opens a new way and inaugurates the New Creation in which there is restoration, reconciliation, forgiveness, healing, and peace.
Recourse
to violence against others or ourselves is a false sacrifice and it
participates in the way of this world which is death and not the Spirit of
Jesus Christ which is life and peace (Romans 8:6). But, if Christ has made the
one sufficient sacrifice, then we can take shelter at the foot of his cross and
lay down our hammer and nails and live in the light of his resurrection. And we can learn what this means, "I desire
mercy, not sacrifice" (Matthew 9:13). Christians who know that the death
of Christ was indeed the death of Death are freed from the fear of Death and
the myriad ways we are tempted to appease its power at the expense of others.
Perhaps this does not mean we must embrace complete non-violence (though that is the direction the New Testament points). But, at the very least, Christians should be much more wary than we often are of allowing others to suffer so we can remain comfortable and of justifying violence for our own security. And we should never celebrate the deaths of others, even our enemies.
We
worship the crucified and risen Lord in whose Life our life is hid. Because we
know that Christ, crucified and risen, has defeated the power of Death, we need
not fear death. We need not sacrifice the lives of others to protect our own. The death of Christ was
the death of Death. Now, the only sacrifice we need to offer is our own broken,
contrite hearts and the living sacrifice of love for one another in thanksgiving
to God for what he has done for us. Our lives are now hidden with Christ in
God. And we are free to live without fear in his Life and Peace.
Alleluia!
Christ is risen!
The
Lord is risen indeed. Alleluia!
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