Feb
Prayer for Tolerance and Understanding
September 24, 2007
The title used for tonight’s prayer service, “As I have loved you,” comes
from what is sometimes known as Jesus’ great “High Priestly” prayer. The words
are said to his disciples at the final supper they share together in John’s gospel.
The full context is this: “I give you a new commandment. Love one another as I
have loved you.”
But we are stuck with the next question. How, exactly, did Jesus love
them? How does he love us?
For the answer to that question, I want to take us to the very beginning of
Mark’s gospel. Mark has written the shortest and, arguably, the most pointed
account of this Jesus of Nazareth. It starts with his baptism by John, moves
immediately to his being led by God’s spirit into the wilderness for 40 days; he
then chooses disciples to follow him, and heads to the synagogue in Capernaum
and begins to teach. And everyone is amazed at his teaching because it is with
power and authority. Then begins a striking series of healing stories: a man with
an unclean spirit is set free, Simon’s mother-in-law is restored to health, and
crowds gather just to see and hear him as he frees crowds of people from their
infirmities, physical and spiritual.
Immediately a leper walks up to him and we have just heard that story. This
is the first major controversy Jesus creates in Mark’s gospel. He actually touches
the leper and heals him. He touches him–something unheard of and unthinkable in
first-century Palestine.
What is this story about really? It is not about leprosy as we understand it.
This is not what we now call Hansen’s disease. No, this man could have had any
kind of skin blemish, any kind of physical deformity. Israel’s purity code, mostly
taken from the book of Leviticus, demanded that anyone who was “blemished”
should be shunned and cast out from the community. It was God’s law! It was
unalterable. You were no longer part of Israel, part of the community.
The physical cure is never the point in Mark’s gospel. The big deal here is
not the physical healing. As the noted scripture scholar, Fr. Raymond Brown
comments on Mark’s miracle stories, he says Mark’s point is always “to teach
about the way God’s rule is to destroy all forms of harmful evil, spiritual and
physical.” Jesus is saying, with power, God is not interested in purity codes–any
purity codes, ancient or modern. The old purity codes were mostly about what you
could eat and wear; the new purity codes in our own time and church are mostly
about sex. Jesus says by his deeds: Purity codes exclude those who most need
help; God’s plan is to include all.
“As I have loved you….” Jesus’ love is very practical; it is very real; it is
very action oriented. He frees people! He frees them from their own worst fears;
he frees us from petty and small concerns about who is with the “in” group and
who is in the “out” group. In God’s kingdom, Jesus proclaims, there is no “in”
group. We are all God’s children–without exception. There is a beautiful image
that Henri Nouwen used once. He said he loved to imagine Jesus’ descent into hell
after his death and see Jesus go to reach out first to his dear friend Judas; and he
embraces him. Even Judas. We are all God’s children–without exception.
As I look back from tonight, when we were planning this prayer service, we
were much too timid and much too minimalist. We talked of engendering
tolerance and understanding. That’s a wonderful goal. But it is not Jesus’ gift and
command. I can expect tolerance and understanding from the State or
Commonwealth, I can demand tolerance and understanding from public
institutions. But Jesus asks for–indeed demands–much more. The Christian
community is to be a place where people free each other to stand before God and
each other as equals, as brothers and sisters, as followers of the Jesus who loves
people into life and freedom. In this space, we are called to much more than
tolerance and understanding.
We are called to be passionate about our acceptance of each other–and all
people. I actually did much more research on the gospel passage for tonight than
usual. I was fascinated by the translation that says Jesus looked on the leper with
compassion. Some translations, like the RSV, say he looked on the leper with pity.
That did not seem right to me. I kept looking around and discovered the Greek
word used here in Mark’s gospel is only used one other place in the entire New
Testament. It is in Luke’s account of Jesus being challenged by a lawyer who
asked: “Who is my neighbor.” We call that story the story of the “Good
Samaritan.” The man in that story is also “moved with great compassion,” the
same word.
But to make matters even more interesting, commentators add that many
ancient manuscripts translate the word as anger, not compassion or pity at all. Did
Jesus look upon the leper with anger as well as compassion? Anger at the
injustice, anger at the exclusion of a child of God, anger at old purity codes that
had long outlived their usefulness? God knows I get angry whenever I see or
experience discrimination or bigotry. Maybe anger is a proper response
sometimes, and is a part of loving as Jesus loved.
The gospel tonight does not ask us to be tolerant and understanding. It asks
us–commands us–to love. Even to love those who are our enemies and would
exclude us. I really am sorry that there are no exceptions to Jesus’ command. I
really am sorry that there are no “privileged” outcasts, no special disenfranchised,
no entitlement to special care and treatment because you are the one excluded–for
whatever reason. There is simply the command to love as Jesus loved us.
And it needs to begin in your heart–and in mine. Peace!
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