Philosophers learn about an unknown God and disciples receive the
Spirit of Truth.
This
Sunday’s readings are not very homogeneous – apparently. You decide.
They start
with the Apostle presenting God’s case to a world of humanists; then we hear a
meditation that reminds us of the holocaust.
The readings continue with Christians whose sufferings in the world
imitate their Lord’s, and they culminate with the Spirit of Truth commanding
the disciples to love one another in the face of all.
Acts 17:22-31.
The reading from Acts is the well-known account of Paul preaching to the Athenians.
This is the one model sermon in the New Testament for approaching the
non-Judean intelligentsia of the Roman Empire .
The previous narrative (Acts 17:17-21) shows Paul
seeking to engage Judeans in their synagogues in Athens, but also as
encountering Epicurean and Stoic philosophers in the market places. The intellectual leaders become interested in
this new celebrity and he is invited to make a public discourse at the forum.
Paul begins with the Athenians’ admission of an area
of ignorance. Their market place has an
altar dedicated “to an unknown god.”
This shows there is at least one mystery they have not unraveled, one
being before which they still stand in ignorance. Paul tells them that he has come to present
knowledge of what had been unknown – the
unknown god will be proclaimed to them.
He is able to refer to classic Greek poets to
establish that God is creator and all people are creatures of God (17:24 -29), but something new, beyond this
classical poetry, has indeed come about.
There is a
“now” in Paul’s sermon that is the turning point from what all philosophers
know to what must be proclaimed by prophet and apostle. The first proclamation is that of
judgment. “…now [God] commands all
people everywhere to repent” (verse 30), the message of a John the Baptist. How the imminent judgment will come about is
the climax of Paul’s speech. “[God] has
fixed a day on which he will have the world judged in righteousness by a man
whom he has appointed, and of this he has given assurance to all by raising him
from the dead” (verse 31, NRSV).
If the notion of the world facing a judgment by
righteousness was not entirely new to the Greeks, the notion of the judge as
one raised from the dead was, indeed, “foolishness” to the Greeks (I
Corinthians 1:23).
Our reading stops at this point, but we may note
that the polite gentlemen of the academy in Athens ,
rather than stoning Paul, rescheduled him for later discussion on a date that
probably never came (verse 32). There is
also the modest note that at least two Athenians (prominent in later Christian
circles, no doubt) responded to Paul and became believers, Dionysius the
Areopagite and the woman Damaris.
Psalm 66:8-20.
The reading from the Psalm has three rather
different moments,
·
one spoken by a sorely-tried Israel
(verses 8-12),
·
one spoken by a royal figure presenting multitudes of animals for sacrifice to God (verses 13-15), and
·
one in which this figure proclaims his salvation received from God (verses 16-20).
We will dwell a little only on the first moment. It
opens as if it were addressed to the world – “Bless our God, O peoples” – but
as it continues it is clear that it is the Israelite people who are
speaking.
For you, O God, have tested us …
you brought us into the net;
you laid burdens on our backs;
you let people ride over our heads;
we went through fire and through water
yet you have brought us out to a spacious place (verses
11-12, NRSV).
As modern Christians hear and reflect on this
passage, it must remind us of the Yom
HaShoah, the day of remembrance of the Holocaust. That day of remembrance falls around this
time each year in the Christian calendar, but the Jewish calendar has its own
rhythm, and Yom HaShoah, the 27th of Nisan, came this year on April
20-21.
Nevertheless, given the Lectionary readings in the
Easter season, it is important that Christians remember with some awe the great
sufferings of our Jewish neighbors when we ponder the resurrection.
I Peter 3:13-22.
The Christians of the late first century who are
addressed in First Peter have to suffer for their faith. The apostle emphasizes that their suffering
is not punishment, but they suffer even
though they do good. They should
always conduct themselves blamelessly so that there can never be any doubt that
their suffering is undeserved (verses 16-17).
The apostle then expands on Christ’s suffering
because, in suffering, he bore the sins of others. The impact of Jesus’ work of salvation is
ever-widening in its effect, and among those others for whom Jesus died are sinners
of all ages.
Preaching to the dead. The writer thinks about the people caught in
the world-judgment of Noah’s flood. Only
eight people were saved in the ark; all the rest died in the world flood. The spirits of those drowned sinners lay in
limbo until the spirit of the risen Jesus went to them to announce good news
(verses 19-20).
People in the apostle’s time do not face the world
flood, but they have baptism to save them with the resurrected Jesus.
And baptism, which [Noah’s flood] prefigured, now
saves you – not as a removal of dirt from the body, but as an appeal to God for
a good conscience, through the resurrection of Jesus Christ, who has gone into
heaven and is at the right hand of God... (verses 21-22a, NRSV).
That exalted Christ now rules over all angels,
authorities, and powers who have been exercising tyranny and suffering over all
the peoples (verse 22).
Such was the way the apostle gave comfort to the
righteous who suffered for their faith in Asia Minor .
In the Gospel we continue to overhear Jesus’
instructions to the disciples about the time after he is gone. They will be known as Jesus’ disciples
because they love one another (John 13:35 ),
and when they thus live by love they are keeping Jesus’ commandments (14:15 and 21).
Though Jesus is leaving, the disciples will not be
alone. Jesus will send them the Advocate
(or, in Luke’s language, the Holy Spirit).
This Advocate is “the Spirit of
truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it neither sees him nor knows
him. You know him, because he abides
with you…” (verse 17, NRSV).
The presence of the Spirit is also related to
keeping Jesus’ commandments. Judean tradition counted 613 commandments in
the Law that the faithful Judean was to keep.
Our passage views the keeping of these commandments as included in a
living relationship to the Lord Jesus and as fulfilled when a truly reciprocal
love between the Lord and the believers is realized.
“They who have my commandments and keep them are
those who love me; and those who love me will be loved by my Father, and I will
love them and reveal myself to them” (verse 21).
In the world but distinct from it,
the will of God through the ages is accomplished in the full life found in
mystical union with the risen Lord.
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