Fourth Sunday in Lent
II Corinthians 5:16-21, Luke 15:1-3, 11-32
Today's readings clearly are joined in theme, as is the Psalm, 32. Beginning with Corinthians, remember that Paul is writing to a church that regularly has squabbles and fights and divisions between social and economic classes. This reading is all about our point of view in looking at ourselves and other people.
Think of baptism as causing a change in eyeglass prescriptions. Before we saw Jesus as human, and we saw everyone else fully in their limited, flawed humanity. We were quick to point out what was wrong in others. Once our prescription changes, however, we begin to be able to see others as God sees them: people deeply in need of reconciliation with a God who offers grace and forgiveness and, by implied extension, in need of reconciliation with one another.
It's important to note that the renewal of a relationship with God comes first. Without that, we do not have the grace, the power, the insight (to continue the metaphor) to see others with the generosity with which God sees them.
Once we have renewed our own relationship with God, through being "in Christ" and therefore newly created, then we are given the task of calling others to this reconciliation. We are called to create, if you will, a "new world order" based on reconciliation. Once we internalize God's forgiveness of us, then we have the power not only to forgive others (a la the Lord's Prayer), but to help others understand God's gracious forgiveness offered to them and then to pay it forward to others.
All of this is amply illustrated in the story Jesus tells in Luke that we often know as the Prodigal Son. RIght off the bat we need to look again at how that title colors our understanding of this story. It's really not about either son, but about the Father, one who forgives so extravagantly it offends folk who think that very forgiveness is unjust!
A few interesting details on this story. Inheritance law would have given the elder brother the vast majority (about 2/3) of the property upon his father's death, while the younger brother would have received only a third. It was not uncommon for fathers to make a "living trust" with sons, to hand over control of property with the provision that they would still live on it and have privilege of place in helping make decisions.
Oh, and by the way, no respectable man would have gone running down a road anywhere unless his coat was on fire!! Especially to greet someone of much lower status than himself!
Remember the context for this story in the first three verses of the chapter. Jesus has been hanging out with the kind of folk who most need to be reconciled with God and with their communities. The "righteous" folk are offended by this, because they think Jesus should make those folk change their lives before they receive the love and attention Jesus lavishes on them. That is a very common human inclination: say you're sorry and make restitution and then we will forgive you. That's certainly the attitude of the older brother, and probably many of us as well.
But the father in the story doesn't even wait for the younger son to say a single word before he rushes to meet him with a loving embrace. When the younger son tries to explain what has happened and admit his failures, the father stops him and calls for a party. We know the son has indeed had a change of heart, but the father does not know this before embracing him!
The theologian Martin Luther once wrote, "Forgiveness is not an occasional art; it is a permanent attitude." That's what both Paul and Jesus are talking about. And this is very tough stuff for most of us, indeed.
Today's readings clearly are joined in theme, as is the Psalm, 32. Beginning with Corinthians, remember that Paul is writing to a church that regularly has squabbles and fights and divisions between social and economic classes. This reading is all about our point of view in looking at ourselves and other people.
Think of baptism as causing a change in eyeglass prescriptions. Before we saw Jesus as human, and we saw everyone else fully in their limited, flawed humanity. We were quick to point out what was wrong in others. Once our prescription changes, however, we begin to be able to see others as God sees them: people deeply in need of reconciliation with a God who offers grace and forgiveness and, by implied extension, in need of reconciliation with one another.
It's important to note that the renewal of a relationship with God comes first. Without that, we do not have the grace, the power, the insight (to continue the metaphor) to see others with the generosity with which God sees them.
Once we have renewed our own relationship with God, through being "in Christ" and therefore newly created, then we are given the task of calling others to this reconciliation. We are called to create, if you will, a "new world order" based on reconciliation. Once we internalize God's forgiveness of us, then we have the power not only to forgive others (a la the Lord's Prayer), but to help others understand God's gracious forgiveness offered to them and then to pay it forward to others.
All of this is amply illustrated in the story Jesus tells in Luke that we often know as the Prodigal Son. RIght off the bat we need to look again at how that title colors our understanding of this story. It's really not about either son, but about the Father, one who forgives so extravagantly it offends folk who think that very forgiveness is unjust!
A few interesting details on this story. Inheritance law would have given the elder brother the vast majority (about 2/3) of the property upon his father's death, while the younger brother would have received only a third. It was not uncommon for fathers to make a "living trust" with sons, to hand over control of property with the provision that they would still live on it and have privilege of place in helping make decisions.
Oh, and by the way, no respectable man would have gone running down a road anywhere unless his coat was on fire!! Especially to greet someone of much lower status than himself!
Remember the context for this story in the first three verses of the chapter. Jesus has been hanging out with the kind of folk who most need to be reconciled with God and with their communities. The "righteous" folk are offended by this, because they think Jesus should make those folk change their lives before they receive the love and attention Jesus lavishes on them. That is a very common human inclination: say you're sorry and make restitution and then we will forgive you. That's certainly the attitude of the older brother, and probably many of us as well.
But the father in the story doesn't even wait for the younger son to say a single word before he rushes to meet him with a loving embrace. When the younger son tries to explain what has happened and admit his failures, the father stops him and calls for a party. We know the son has indeed had a change of heart, but the father does not know this before embracing him!
The theologian Martin Luther once wrote, "Forgiveness is not an occasional art; it is a permanent attitude." That's what both Paul and Jesus are talking about. And this is very tough stuff for most of us, indeed.
Labels: Reconciliation

