This is the gist of my sermon this morning on Mark 10:2-16.
Some
Pharisees came: and to test Jesus they asked him: is it lawful for a man to
divorce his wife?
I've been fielding quite a few press enquiries over the last couple of weeks, about the appointment of a new Archbishop of Canterbury, and some of the things that the press keep asking about the various candidates is 'where does he stand on gay marriage?' or 'does he support the ordination of women?'.
Reading Mark 10 for today's sermon, as I read that first test question, time
seemed to compress. People don't change much, do they? We seem to have an inbuilt
desire - part of what the medieval theologians described as original sin - to
classify people. And so we ask some key questions, of bishops, of politicians,
of people we meet at parties (more subtly). And we assume that the answers to
those questions will tell us whether the person is on our side or not. Are they
right or wrong, good or bad, in or out, acceptable or unacceptable, depending
on their answers to a few key test questions.
The
actual questions change over time and between contexts. In modern American
politics, abortion is a key one. And indeed we seem to be heading that way here. In church circles, gay marriage is rapidly overtaking the
ordination of women as the killer question.
In Jesus
case the gospels record four test questions put to him. There is this one about
divorce, and then a set of three test questions
put to Jesus by different interest groups on another occasion: should we pay
tax to the emperor? If seven brothers all marry the same woman in turn, as each
dies in turn, whose wife would she be at the resurrection? And which is the
greatest commandment?
These questions were put to test
or to trap Jesus. The questions were obviously designed to have no safe answer.
They test specific points of Jewish and Roman law, or the Pharisees and
the Saducees theological disagreements on points of theology, and to that
extent don't translate well into our own time and place.
But what
is very striking about the test questions Jesus was asked, and the test
questions that people are faced with in our own time, is how much they revolve
around issues of sex and gender. Abortion, gay marriage, divorce, remarriage,
how sexual relationships on earth will map onto relationships in heaven. We
often hear how the church today is obsessed with issues of sex and gender, and
perhaps it might give us some perverse comfort to know that there is nothing
new in that. Questions of sex and gender seem to be particularly latched onto
whenever human beings are looking for questions to ask to test who is in and
who is out, questions asked specifically in order to condemn someone. Questions
asked to police the limits of the group and the purity of a religion.
Another
way in which time seems to compress between then and now in reading this
passage is the way in which questions of sexual ethics and the way we treat
children are brought together here. Now it may well be that in previous
generations people might have been blind to the fact that these are linked, but
we certainly can't make that particular mistake any more. Whether it is a 15
year old and her teacher running off to France together, the latest celebrity
paedophilia scandal, or the systematic grooming and pimping of young girls in
Rochdale, questions of sexual ethics and the appropriate boundaries and
relationships between adults and
children are everywhere.
.....
This reading is part of an extended section of teaching by Jesus in Marks gospel which broadly addresses issues of Christian discipleship. The section extends from mid way through chapter 8 to nearly the end of chapter ten, and both begins and ends with Jesus trying to explain to the disciples that he was going to be killed, and the implications of this. Much of the teaching in this section is teasing out the implications of Jesus own example for living a Christian life.
It isn't
only the Pharisees who find this hard to take. Time and again in this section
the disciples either can't take in what they are hearing, or react against it.
Right at the beginning, in 8:32, when Jesus has just begun to teach the
disciples about what will happen to him, Peter takes him aside and rebukes him,
prompting Jesus into that startling command to 'get behind me, Satan!'. Further
on in chapter 10, when Jesus has mostly finished his teaching for now and the
disciples are on the road again, we are told they are both amazed and afraid.
This is not easy stuff to take. It wasn't any easier for the first disciples
than it is for us.
This particular section comes at the beginning of Chapter 10. It is
part of a section of teaching that all happens in one place, framed by Jesus
and his disciples travelling. The story opens in verse 1 with Jesus arriving in
Judea and teaching the crowds as was his custom. Immediately, the Pharisees
turn up with their trick question about divorce. Jesus answers that, and then
we have the incident with people bringing their children to him for a blessing.
He is about to head off after that, when a young man runs up to him to ask how
he could inherit eternal life. The incident ends with the saying that it is
harder for the rich to enter the kingdom of heaven than for a camel to go
through the eye of a needle.
This is
the context in which those who are following Jesus are bemused and afraid. We
can imagine that those who are not following him are even more confused, and
when even his own followers are scared, it is less surprising that the
Pharisees are out to get him.
The key
theme of this episode is perfection. How do we achieve perfection, what sort of
perfection does God demand of us. And I think the key to it is the central
passage, the point at which Jesus takes that child and tells his disciples that
unless they enter the kingdom like a child, they won't enter it at all.
Children
in those days were the lowest of the low. They had no status, no rights. Under
Roman law, a father had the right of life and death over his children. We might
agonise about smacking children, but then a father could legally kill his
child. Children had less legal protection than slaves, less than women.
But Jesus
tells his disciples not just to let children take up his time and energy, but
to become like them. In the context of this whole section, we have quite a
dramatic structure here. The Pharisees ask about legal perfection regarding
divorce and Jesus sets them a breathtakingly high standard. The young rich man,
keen as mustard, asks how he can be saved, and told to obey the law he eagerly
asserts that he has kept every word. Jesus looks at him, loves him, and says
'Well, if you want to be perfect, sell all you have and give it to the poor'.
That's what terrifies the disciples . Who then can be saved? They ask, and
Jesus replies 'for people it is impossible, but nothing is impossible with
God.'
The pivot
of this whole section is that small scene with the children. The desperate
parents are thrusting them towards the celebrity preacher, hoping for some
stardust to rub off, some blessing to be catching. And Jesus not only gives
them what they want, but insists that the children are the role model for
Christian discipleship.
The
Pharisees are desperate for legal perfection. The rich young man is desperate
for moral perfection. Both want to know that they are doing the right thing.And
the vignette of Jesus and the children acts as the pivot, the hinge, between
these two stories about seeking perfection, seeking assurance that we are in
not out, wanting to know that we are doing the right thing.
It seems
to me that what Jesus says when he puts the small child forward needs to be
understood in this context. Perfection, though a great thing, is not the point.
Seeking after perfection, whether for our own moral satisfaction or as
something to impose on others, gets in the way of a simple desire for an
encounter with Jesus. The parents haven't understood what Jesus is saying, but
in thrusting their children forward to Jesus they have understood more of the
heart of his message than the legal experts and the deeply moral young man.
It is so
tempting to ask the test questions. It is so tempting to seek to define others,
not just because we want to know whether they are in or out, but because at an
even deeper level we want assurances about our own righteousness. We want the
answers our politicians, our bishops give us to reinforce our own sense of
being right. We want our fears that we might be wrong to be authoritatively
answered.
And Jesus
is sympathetic to that desire. He doesn't give the Pharisees and the young man
wispy washy answers suggesting that you can do what you like. He answers their
questions on their terms, and the answers are terrifying. They are clearly
meant to be terrifying, to set a ridiculously high standard, to expose the
absurdity of attempts to be perfect. A few moments later, when the disciples
are astounded by the parable of the camel and the needle they ask 'who then can
be saved?', and Jesus says it is impossible for us to be saved by our own
efforts; but all things are possible for God.
But
before that, he has shown them rather than told them what he means, with this
encounter with the children. It is a vivid demonstration of his point that ultimately,
our call to perfection is a distraction from what is simply a call to come. Our
call to morality is secondary to our call to simply encounter Jesus. Our
acceptability to God lies simply in our being prepared to come and meet God,
just as we are.
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