Monday, January 23, 2017

A Better Way: The Church As a Beacon

"Now I appeal to you, brothers and sisters, by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you be in agreement and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be united in the same mind and the same purpose. For it has been reported to me by Chloe’s people that there are quarrels among you, my brothers and sisters. What I mean is that each of you says, “I belong to Paul,” or “I belong to Apollos,” or “I belong to Cephas,” or “I belong to Christ.” Has Christ been divided? Was Paul crucified for you? Or were you baptized in the name of Paul?  For Christ did not send me to baptize but to proclaim the gospel, and not with eloquent wisdom, so that the cross of Christ might not be emptied of its power.

For the message about the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God."
--I Corinthians 1: 10-15, 17-18

Paul.  He had many leather-bound books.



Let's talk a bit about the letters of Paul.  This guy was kind of a big deal, and if you got one of his letters, that was kind of a big deal.  While the early church respected Paul for his contributions to the life of the faith, the truth is, you usually didn't get a letter from Paul unless something was wrong.  This is especially true for the Corinthians, for whom things were so bad that Paul wrote them once, checked up on them, and then had to write them again; in fact, the Corinthians had to get two MORE letters from Clement of Rome before things finally started to straighten up for them! Basically,  if your church sought the wisdom of someone like Paul and got a letter from him, odds were that things weren't going so well. 

That's what we find here in the first chapter of Paul's First Letter to the Church in Corinth.  It's clear, even to our modern ears, that something is wrong.  After his usual salutation, Paul says, "I appeal to you, brothers and sisters, that there be no divisions among you."  Obviously there is division and quarrel afoot, but why?  

Paul writes that some are saying, 'I belong to Paul,' while others are saying, 'I belong to Apollos' or Cephas (that's the Greek name for Peter), or Christ.  Why such hostility?  What were these groupings all about?  Well, the communities to which Paul wrote were extremely diverse, made up of all sorts of Christians.  There were those who were still very much steeped in their Jewish identity, those who were Greek, and those who were some other kind of Gentile.  The members of these groups had mostly been baptized by the same person.  You can see what ends up happening:  one group gets baptized by one person, another group by another person, and eventually the groups begin to bicker and argue, saying, "We're more important than you because so-and-so baptized us."  Yes, this was a real argument!  If we're looking at the groups, it's a fair bet that those who said, 'I belong to Paul' were the Gentile converts, the ones who said, 'I belong to Apollos' were the Greek converts, the philosophers who were trying to adapt their old ways of thinking to this new Christian thing, and those who said, 'I belong to Cephas' were likely the Jewish members of the congregation.  As for those who said, 'I belong to Christ' the theologian William Barclay suggests that these are your run-of-the-mill fundamentalists who believed that they, and they alone had it all figured out.  In short, the the whole makeup of the Corinthian church was a mess.

Paul's advice is for them to put aside their differences and remember what matters.  It does not matter who baptized you.  It does not matter where you came from or what your labels are.  What matters is that you belong to Christ.  All of you.  What matters is the cross, that great big stumbling block:  for Jews because they couldn't get beyond the line in Deuteronomy 21: 23, which says anyone who hangs on a tree is accursed (how then could the Messiah be accursed if he hung on a tree?!), and for Greeks because their wisdom taught them that God could not suffer, otherwise he (or she) is not God.  And yet, Paul reminds them, this community is full of Jews and Greeks--and all sorts of other folks--who have been able to lean on the unifying love of Christ poured out on the cross without letting their identities as Jews and Greeks get in the way.  At least not up to this point.  Now, all of a sudden, folks are letting their smaller labels--Jew, Greek, Gentile--get in the way of their larger label--Christian.  This is a problem.  

Christians today are not so different.  We have our little groups too, which we call Episcopalians, or Methodists, or Roman Catholics, or Baptist, and too often we let such labels get in the way.  We are, first and foremost, Christians.  We belong, first and foremost, to Christ.  We do not belong to the Episcopal Church, or the Methodist Church, or the Roman Catholic Church, or the Baptist Church, but we belong to THE Church, which is to say, the Body of Christ.  That's not to say being Episcopalian, or  Methodist, or Roman Catholic is a bad thing. We need to affirm those identities because they are important to us, they shape who we are.  Paul does not condemn the people for being Jews or Greeks--shoot, he himself affirms over and over again that he is a Jew.  They should maintain those identities, but they must never let them get in the way of their common life as Christians.  And we are the same way.  It's ok for us to embrace our individual identity as Episcopalians, but we must never claim that we are somehow better Christians because of it.  What unites us is always more important than what divides us.  Paul knew that, and so must we.

Imagine a church made up of folks from all over the spectrum of Christianity.  There are those who have been in the church for generations, others who have just recently joined, and others who are there but aren't sure they buy into it just yet.  All of these folks have an identity that they bring into the church, and that affects how they worship, how they hear the sermon, which songs they know, or whether they stand or kneel to pray.  Each person brings something different, yet this church is united in its diversity.  Know of any church like that?  I do:  the Church of the Good Shepherd in Asheboro, North Carolina!

Good Shepherd, which I have been blessed to serve for the last year and a half, is a community made up of folks from all walks of life. There are those of  who have been Episcopalians our whole lives.  There are those who still deeply identify with another tradition, be it Methodist or Roman Catholic, or whatever, but who come to Good Shepherd because they find it a place of welcome and refreshment. There are others who aren't even sure what they identify as, and they too have a place where they can belong.  This church is really good about welcoming people right where they are.  It doesn't matter what labels we wear, what matters is our love for Jesus; after all, that's what brought folks here.  Each person is honored, each of their labels respected and upheld, but at the end of the day everyone unites around the larger label that we all share:  the label of a follower of Jesus Christ.  I look around Good Shepherd and see the kind of community that Paul had hoped Corinth would be; that is, a diverse and united community. 

I know that you know churches like that.  Maybe your church is like that.  Now imagine if those of us who are part of such welcoming and affirming communities took that attitude, that kind of welcome, out into the world with us.  Inside the church walls we're so good at looking past labels and affirming people for who they are, I wonder if we might do that elsewhere, too?  In a world that is so divided on so many fronts--where some folks have their smaller labels disrespected, while others cling to their smaller label so tightly that they can never even speak to the Other--I wonder if we could be the beacon, if we could show the world a better way, a way that affirms our individual identities, while reminding them that what unites is always more important than what divides.  I wonder if our church communities could go into the world and make it a little more like that Kingdom we always talk about. 

Ya know, not much has changed in 2000 years.  The church is still a wonderfully diverse community that gets so caught up in the camps of us and them.  But the dream Paul had--which is nothing less than the dream of the Kingdom of God--is still alive.  We are the inheritors of that dream.  We can, and we will, show the world what that dream looks like.  

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