Archive for January, 2008

LIKE A ROARING LION

Sunday, January 27th, 2008 by mswora

So what’s with all the animal references? Last week it was turkeys, this week its lions. In this latest message, the leonine imagery is justified, because Peter uses it to symbolize "our ancient foe," "the accuser of the brethren," "the tempter." "So do you believe in the devil?" someone asked me after this message was delivered. In some times and places, it might be easier to believe in the existence of the devil than in the existence of a good and almighty God. But if I take Jesus seriously, then I have to "give the devil his due," at least for existing and working, ever so subtly, by the power of fear. Unlike Martin Luther while he was translating the Bible, I will throw no ink well at the adversary. Just a few words to unmask him and his bag of tricks. And hopefully leave us with more faith than fear, at Download roaringlion.doc . Anyone for a safari?

Peace

Mathew Swora, pastor, Emmanuel Mennonite Church

WHAT A BUNCH OF TURKEYS!!

Monday, January 21st, 2008 by mswora

I’m very proud of this sermon. But maybe I shouldn’t be. Because its about a life and death matter: humility. Should I get down on myself for not being as humble as some people I know and admire? Or is that a form of pride too? And what does that have to do with turkey psychology? Find out by reading the message at Download humilityword.doc. Then let me know what you think, please, to get the discussion going about true humility of the kind Peter encourages when he says, "Humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God…."

Mathew Swora, pastor 

WHY FOUR GOSPELS?

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008 by mswora

OR, WHY JUST FOUR GOSPELS?

“Why do you guys have four gospels?” my Muslim friends ask, on the understanding that three of them would be superfluous and unnecessary were the Quran to include a gospel, or, in Arabic, “Injil.”

By contrast, many of my more secular friends wonder why we only have four gospels, when, according to Dan Brown’s novel, The Da Vinci Code, there were at least eighty gospels written by the time of the Emperor Constantine. Don’t ask me where and how Brown came up with this figure. But he and many others believe or imply that all eighty were and remain of equal value, maybe of even greater value if its true, as Dan Brown says, that the Roman emperors and the Vatican were trying to hide something from us by choosing our four gospels. And if the Vatican even existed back then.

The fact that there are four canonical gospels is increasingly explained as a power play on the part of early church leaders to solidify their own authority. This is also the impression I certainly got from a Town Forum speech recently delivered by the scholar, Elaine Pagels, in Minneapolis. The only justification she gave for the four canonical gospels is something Bishop Athanasius once said, in the Fourth Century AD, that since there were four winds and four directions, there should therefore be four gospels. The audience laughed heartily along with her at his reasoning. I would have joined in, too, if that had been his sole justification for the four gospels. But it wasn’t.

With all the gospels being generated in the second through fifth centuries, there certainly were issues and questions of authority. But if the likes of Athanasius and Ambrose wanted to choose gospels that would have solidified their own ecclesiastical power, they could have chosen better gospels than the ones that were recommended to us in Bishop Athanasius’ festal letter of 367 AD, which contains the first list of the twenty-seven documents we now call the New Testament canon. And we can get into long arguments over the degree to which Athanasius was prescribing or describing what the church recognized as apostolic and, therefore, canonical, documents.

What most of the gospels that didn’t make the cut have in common are two things (at least): relative youth and gnosticism. As for the first criterion, age or youth, most of the gospels that Dan Brown and some of my friends wish to include in a newly configured canon are demonstrably not of the same age as the canonical gospels. More than a few of them bear evidence of having been written much later, even in reaction to the apostolic gospels, as increasingly appears to be the case with the Third Century Gospel of Judas.

As for gnosticism, that’s what disqualified many, if not most, of the other gospels. Gnosticism is a hard thing to describe. I think of it as a tendency to divorce the spiritual from the material, to elevate the spiritual over the material, and to seek and offer pathways of escape and salvation from the evil material world through secret rituals and knowledge (or gnosis, in Greek), bordering on, or including, magic. This kind of religion would have lent itself very well to the creation of a very authoritarian church hierarchy that would logically be indispensable because of its unique access to secret knowledge that one could get nowhere else. That we did get very authoritarian church hierarchies that made themselves nearly indispensable has less to do with the canonical Bible and more to do with the nature of humans and institutions.

A cursory examination of both Testaments would show that the gnostic worldview of Dan Brown’s symbolology in The Da Vinci Code, and in many of the noncanonical gospels is entirely alien to the Hebrew Bible, the Old Testament, and that much of the New Testament is engaged in hand-to-hand combat with gnosticism. The gnostic gospels present Jesus as a teacher of deep and mystical secrets, which is their perfect right by modern standards of free speech. But such a Jesus is hard to square with his Judaism and his Hebrew Bible, unless one wishes to reinvent him in the manner of a radically Hellenized (Greek-ified) Jew, more amenable to pagan society of the time than to his Palestinian Judaism.

Don’t think that hasn’t been tried. The attempt has been going on for 19 centuries, at least. But to include such gospels into the canon, as many would recommend, is to end up with a Bible with two heads sprouting off one body, the Old Testament. Were, say, The Gospel of Judas added right after Malachi (the last book of the Old Testament), before The Gospel of Thomas or Barnabas or the canonical Matthew, then we would have one Testament beginning with a ringing affirmation that the material creation is good, as is our place in it, and another testament beginning with an affirmation that it is bad, and it is our job to escape from it.

The canonical New Testament is sometimes accused of being anti-semitic. It does reflect struggles of membership and meaning with mainstream Judaism of the time and with its leadership. But opening the canon to the gnostic gospels that were eventually rejected by the church would also open up the floodgates to virulent and unmistakable anti-semitism of the sort that has lately been noted in, for example, other translations of The Gospel of Judas than what National Geographic provided last year.

So, apart from any appeal to divine inspiration, we can affirm the value of the historic Christian canon on the basis of consistency, at the very least. If we wish to canonize all the gnostic and demonstrably non-apostolic gospels, as is anyone’s (personal) right, then, to be fair, please canonize them in a different Bible than the one we use at Emmanuel Mennonite Church. Don’t try to add them to either the Protestant or the Catholic/Orthodox Bible unless you wish to induce a massive case of multiple spiritual personality disorder, a schizoid spirituality and mission that would be both Hebraic and gnostic. I must confess, we Western Christians have had a hard enough time through the millenia with our incipient gnostic tendencies and our multiple spiritual contradictions as it is. I for one would not wish to canonize that lamentable condition by re-opening the canon to everything we’ve already had to sift through beginning some nearly twenty centuries ago.

Mathew Swora, pastor

Emmanuel Mennonite Church

DON’T READ THIS SERMON!

Sunday, January 13th, 2008 by mswora

It’s not for you! I wrote it just for myself, in response to I Peter 5: 1-4, and the words, "Be shepherds of God’s flock that is entrusted to you." Since I am currently the only designated pastor–or shepherd–at Emmanuel Mennonite Church, I invited the members to tune out, plan their weeks or their menus, balance their checkbooks, catch up on their reading or their sleep while I effective talk to myself………..unless…. well, if you absolutely have to read it and see if the shoe fits you, then I suppose you could link on here to read "The Shepherd’s Heart" at Download Shepherdsermon.doc. What’s the worst that could happen if you do? You might end up a pastor, too.

Blessings,

Mathew Swora, pastor

ARE WE UNINDICTED CO-CONSPIRATORS WITH OSAMA BIN LADEN?

Monday, January 7th, 2008 by mswora

You’d think that that is what we are, according to some people, even us pacifist Mennonites, because we believe in God. In the words of a rising chorus of writers, bloggers and even a few preachers, belief in God is either a necessary prerequisite for violence, or constitutes a kind of violence itself. A November issue of The Economist suggests this with a cover picture of God handing down a grenade from a dark cloud, in a caricature of the Sistine Chapel painting by Michaelangelo. I understand that much of this is in reaction to militant Islam and the terrorist attacks of September 11, which were labeled by some wags as “the supreme faith-based initiative.” It doesn’t help that some of the Christian language supporting America’s War on Terror mirrors the Islamist language of the terrorists.

The charge, outlined by “evangelical” atheists such as Richard Dawkins (author of The God Delusion) and Sam Harris (The End of Faith), is that if anyone would believe in the outrageous tenets of any religion, then they would be capable of believing and doing anything, no matter how outrageous. And when the stakes are so high (eternity) and so absolute (God, right and wrong, heaven or hell), then the true believer can allegedly only prove his or her faith worthy of God’s approval by the ultimate act, the willingness to kill infidels, and even to die in the act of killing. The claim is also made that there is nothing inherent within any religion, especially not among the Abrahamic ones, that would moderate or restrain any murderous impulse. Quite the opposite, some say. Even before the events of September 11, 2001, I was repeatedly told by some who had lived through the Second World War that to claim belief in anything or anyone implies an unavoidable next step: that I must kill anyone who believes differently. So they strongly believe that you should never believe anything strongly. Granted: that is indeed how they experienced belief in pre-war Europe, of either the religious, fascist or Marxist sort. This may explain, in part, the great degree of secularism in post-war Europe. Karen Armstrong effectively declared, in her book Holy War, that warfare and violence are inherent and inevitable aspects of monotheism. I look in vain for any mention of Christian pacifists and of Christian pacifism among these assertions about religiously-inspired violence.

But they do exist.

So, if violence and monotheism are inherent and necessary to each other, how does anyone explain the Amish? Or the Mennonites? Or Quakers, Hutterites, the early Franciscans and other Christian pacifists, as were most of the first Christians of the first three centuries before Constantine? They are and have long been staunchly pacifist, yet not because their faith was weak, relativistic, universalistic and tolerant of all things. Many of them would qualify as fundamentalists, evangelicals and true believers of a type that would have Dawkins or Armstrong scanning them nervously for weapons or suicide bomber belts. In vain, of course.

Its not that we necessarily believe any less strongly than would a suicide bomber or an armed Christian crusader. Its that our belief system insists that the ultimate proof of our faith is not in the depth of our hatred for anyone, nor in our willingness to kill, but in the depth and extent of our love for friend and foe alike, to the point that we would rather die for our enemy than kill him or her. The world saw evidence of this stance in the response of the Amish community to the killer of the schoolgirls at Nickel Mines, PA., and to his family.

For the Christian pacifist, the proof of our faith is not in the urgency wth which we seize the levers of history with weapons of terror and acts of violence, but in the love and patience with which we work for the eternal and the temporal welfare of all, indiscriminate of whether they agree with us or like us or even wish to kill us. Because this is what we see in the nature of God, “who makes his sun to shine and his rain to fall upon the just and the unjust,” and “whose kindness is meant to move us to repentance.” And we know this because of Jesus, who demonstrated such love to the end, and who calls for the same from his followers. He is the definitive self-expression of God, and the key by which we read and interpret the Bible.

Nor is it that our willingness to coexist and even to serve and love people who disagree with us is based on any warm and fluffy universalism or moral relativism. Peace of the sort I’ve just described requires a cold, realistic eye to the nature of human stubbornness and sinfulness, beginning with our own, so that we know ourselves to be in need of at least as much forgiveness as any foe or persecutor. Peace of this sort requires a moral absolutism even stronger than that of the suicide bomber or the Christian crusader, because it applies to the means as well as to the ends. We’d rather fail by virtuous means than succeed by evil ones, because we trust God to vindicate his means by the end he brings to history. Its not that we lack absolutes; its that peaceful, positive, merciful coexistence with even our enemies and detractors is as much a moral absolute to us as is any other value in the realm of sex, wealth or truth-telling. But our job is to apply these absolutes to ourselves. That is all for which God will hold us accountable.

I hope that reassures any reader that they would be safe to visit Emmanuel Mennonite Church, no matter what they believed, or not. But then, some people in history have feared us precisely because we wouldn’t kill people. That’s one reason why the pacifist Anabaptists were so fiercely persecuted in 16th Century Europe, in part, because they wouldn’t join the Wars of Religion. This was Eduard Gibbons’ accusation against the early church in his 18th Century classic, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire: that the Roman Empire was overrun by the barbarians because there were so many Christians who wouldn’t fight them. If I could choose, I would prefer this older criticism over the more contemporary one; its fairer, and its just galling to be constantly accused of something you stand so strongly against.

Let’s see: Gibbons slammed Christianity because of its pacifism, while others slam Christianity because of its allegedly inherent violence. Which is it? I guess it only proves that moral discernment around matters of war and peace shouldn’t be based on public opinion polls or approval ratings.