Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church,
11.00,
8/12/2013
11.00,
8/12/2013
Dan
7:13-14
As
I watched in the night visions,
I saw one like a human being coming
with the clouds of heaven.
And he came to the Ancient One and was
presented before him.
To
him was given dominion and glory and kingship,
that all peoples, nations, and
languages should serve him.
His
dominion is an everlasting dominion that shall not pass away,
and his kingship is one that shall
never be destroyed.
Peace
at Christmas! Doesn’t it just make you feel all warm and fuzzy?
With images of toasty firesides,
chestnuts roasting, and snow a-glistening.
Or
countless Christmas card scenes,
with Mary and Joseph peacefully at
ease in their stable
and the gentle oxen looking on with
large, peaceful doe-eyes…
And
what could be closer to the true meaning of Christmas
than a heartfelt wish for ‘peace on
earth and goodwill to all’?
Except,
as we all know, there is a dark underbelly to the assertion of peace at
Christmas
In
the first world war, the initial hope that they boys would be home by Christmas
foundered in the killing fields of
Flanders and the Somme .
Jona
Lewie, in ‘Stop the Cavalry’, one of the few Christmas songs I actually like,
sums up the failure of the ‘Peace at
Christmas’ hope,
as he mumbles:
Hey,
Mr. Churchill comes over here
To
say we're doing splendidly.
But
it's very cold out here in the snow
Marching
to and from the enemy.
Oh
I say it's tough, I have had enough,
Can
you stop the cavalry?
Wish
I could be dancing now,
In
the arms of the girl I love.
Mary
Bradley waits at home,
She's
been waiting two years long.
Wish
I was at home for Christmas.
And,
more recently, the rock group U2
explicitly brought Jesus into the
equation
of the hope for peace at Christmas,
singing:
Jesus
can you take the time
To
throw a drowning man a line
Peace
on Earth
To
tell the ones who hear no sound
Whose
sons are living in the ground
Peace
on Earth
Jesus
in this song you wrote
The
words are sticking in my throat
Peace
on Earth
Hear
it every Christmas time
But
hope and history won't rhyme
So
what's it worth
This
peace on Earth?
Peace
at Christmas, I want to suggest, is such an evocative symbol to our world
because it represents the hope for
that which is missing
in so much of our normal experience of
life.
Whether
through war, terrorism or assault
we are constantly confronted with
violence
and we are constantly reminded that we
live in a violent world.
In
our relationships with others:
our families, friends, acquaintances
or strangers,
conflict
remains an ever-present possibility
with too many of us for comfort
experiencing violence
within the home at some stage in our
lives.
Our
world, it seems, is caught in an endless cycle of violence
as violence is met with more violence,
aggression with retaliation,
and hostility with
vengeance.
Is
it any wonder that the dream of peace at Christmas
represents such a compelling and
enduring hope?
But
what does it actually mean, to speak of peace at Christmas?
Does
the Christmas hope of peace on earth and goodwill to all
actually make any substantive
difference to our world?
I
think that to find an answer,
we need to rewind slightly and take a
few steps back from Christmas day itself
to discover one of the themes of that
time in the year known as ‘Advent’.
For
many of us, Advent is simply the warning
that we’d better get on with buying
our Christmas presents and writing our cards.
But
there is actually a deeper wisdom in this season
and it revolves around issues of
waiting and hoping.
At one
level, Advent is the time of waiting for the arrival of Christmas day,
it’s a time for considering the
implications
of Jesus coming into the
world as a baby,
born into poverty
and danger
and fleeing his native
country as a refugee under threat of death.
But
at another level, it’s also a time for turning our minds
to the coming again of Jesus.
It’s
a time that invites us to ask the question of how Jesus ‘comes again’
to those of us who live on this
violent, un-peaceful earth.
And
it’s with this in mind that I want us to turn now
to a short reading from the book of
Revelation:
Rev
1:5b-7
To
him who loves us and freed us from our sins by his blood,
and made us to be a kingdom, priests
serving his God and Father,
to him be glory and dominion for ever
and ever. Amen.
Look!
He is coming with the clouds;
every eye will see him, even those who
pierced him;
and on his account all the tribes of
the earth will wail.
So it is to be. Amen.
In
this passage, John gives us a vision of Jesus, the Prince of Peace,
as the one who comes again to the
earth,
and
we see him coming with the clouds, in mystery and majesty,
we see him coming as the pierced one,
the one who has suffered violence,
we see him coming to reveal
the kingdom of God on the earth
John’s
description of Jesus as ‘coming with the clouds’
is a direct reference to Daniel’s
vision with which I started,
in
which ‘one like a human being’ is seen ‘coming with the clouds of heaven’
to be presented before the Ancient One
in order to receive ‘dominion
and glory and kingship’
over all peoples nations and
languages.
And
we are told that his ‘dominion’
will be an everlasting kingdom which
will never pass away.
It’s
this image which John has in mind
when he describes Jesus ‘coming with
the clouds’…
He’s
casting Jesus as the ‘one like a human being’ of Daniel’s vision,
and is giving us an image of the
in-breaking kingdom of God
in which Jesus exercises his kingly
rule over the earth.
This
claim that Jesus is the true king of the earth
presents a direct challenge to all
other earthly claims to power.
If
we think of the most powerful people or institutions on the planet,
we tend to think I’m sure of those
with the most power to instigate violence.
But
this image of Jesus coming with the clouds
tells us that his dominion and glory
and kingship
is far superior to those who
seek to claim power
through violence,
intimidation and force.
So
when we hear news of the all-powerful multinational corporations
controlling the livelihoods and
destinies
of billions of people living
in economic slavery,
or
when international businesses generate suffering around the globe
to ensure their shareholders’ profit
margins remain in the black,
or
when we hear of wars or rumours of wars
as nations forge alliances against
each other
and send in the troops on
civilian populations,
or
when we see tragic pictures of civil wars in Africa,
or hear worrying news of those who
control weapons of mass destruction,
or those who seek to use terror in the
name or religion or ideology.
When
these things and so much more come to our attention,
where, in all this, can good news be
found?
Well,
John of Revelation says it can be found
in the one who comes with the clouds
because,
against all the evidence to the contrary,
Jesus, the one who comes to us in
mystery and majesty
in some way holds glory and dominion and kingship
which is far superior to all other
earthly claims to power.
Multinational
corporations, nation states,
international businesses, and
political ideologies,
all
these are powerful and violent, yes,
but they also exist within time, and
as such are not eternal.
In
his song Mighty Trucks of Midnight,
Bruce Cockburn sings that:
‘Everything that exists in time runs
out of time someday’.
And
it is in contrast to the powerful, violent and temporal kingdoms of the earth
that John presents us with a vision of
the kingdom of heaven
which comes to the earth with the one
who comes on the clouds
and
we are invited to realise that this is an eternal kingdom,
one which will not pass away because
it exists beyond time.
The
kingdom of God in the here-and-now
might be small, insignificant and hard
to see
but
those who work for its establishment,
those who commit themselves to seeing
its coming on the earth
as it is already in heaven,
can be assured that they are devoting
themselves to something of eternal value.
The
question, though, is what does this eternal kingdom look like?
And in what way is it an alternative
to the violent and imperial
kingdoms of the earth
which are so familiar to us
as they take up their weapons
against each other?
The
clue here is found in the way in which Jesus is described…
He
is not just the one who is seen coming with the clouds
he is also seen to come to the earth
as the ‘pierced one’
– the one who has suffered
violence.
We
might expect the ultimate king of creation
to come in might and power, with an
angelic army lined up behind him.
We
might expect the Lord of the eternal kingdom
to come in violent judgment on all
those who have challenged his Lordship,
leaving a trail of
destruction in his wake as those who have opposed him
finally get what’s coming to
them!
But
actually, when he comes to us,
he comes not as an avenging monarch
but as one who has himself suffered
violence.
And
here we see the truth of the cross:
It is the cycle of violence being
broken!
Instead
of meeting violence with more violence,
aggression with retaliation, and
hostility with vengeance,
Jesus
meets violence with… nonviolence!
He
comes not to pierce others for their wrongdoings
but as the one who has been pierced by the wrongdoings of
others.
The
great French philosopher René
Girard says that:
‘A
nonviolent deity can signal his existence to mankind
only
by becoming driven out by violence
– by
demonstrating that he is not able to remain in the kingdom of violence.’
And in this he gives us a profound insight
into
the way in which Jesus comes again to the earth.
By his entering into the cycle of human violence
Jesus
has acted to break that cycle.
His crucifixion at the hands of humanity
represents
his judgment on the kingdom of violence.
And his inauguration of the kingdom of God
on the earth
represents
the nonviolent alternative to retribution and vengeance.
The
only solution to the violence of the world
is for God to take that violence upon
himself…
To
enter into the depths of violence
and so point the way to a peaceful
future for humanity.
The
coming kingdom of
God ,
which arrives with the pierced one who
comes on the clouds
is the peaceful alternative to the
kingdom of violence.
So,
where is this peaceful kingdom?
What
does this mean for those of us who still live
in the midst of the kingdom of
violence?
Well,
there’s good news and bad news here for us, I’m afraid!
The
good news is that this kingdom is already breaking in upon the earth!
John speaks of Jesus ‘coming with the
clouds’ in the present tense…
This is something which is
happening in the here-and-now!
It’s not something which is reserved
solely for some future transformation…
There is already an
alternative available for humanity
to the age-old pattern of
continually meeting violence with more violence.
There is already available to us all
another way of being human
where peace rather than
violence is the order of the day!
But
the bad news, or rather, the difficult news,
is that this peaceful kingdom breaks
in upon the earth
through the faithful witness
of those
who have already transferred their
citizenship
from the kingdom of violence
to the kingdom of peace.
That
is – through us, through the
followers of Jesus…
And
the difficult part of this is that we who seek to follow Jesus,
we who have committed ourselves to his
path
we who pray ‘your kingdom come, on
earth as it is in heaven’
we
are called to follow the example of Jesus
through breaking the cycles
of violence as we encounter them.
This
means that we are called to live our lives very differently
from the ideology which surrounds us
every minute of every day!
We
are called to meet violence with Christ-like nonviolence.
We
are called to resist the temptation to enter the oh-so-tempting,
oh-so-compelling cycles of violence,
retribution and retaliation.
We
are called to be those who might have to join with Christ
in taking up our own cross and sharing
in his supreme rejection of violence.
For
some this will mean persecution and martyrdom
and for many around the world this
Christmastime,
that is exactly what they are
facing
and they, of all people, need
our prayers.
But
for all of us it means a rejection of
the ideology of violence,
and an embracing of a peaceable
alternative.
Do we genuinely want peace at Christmas?
Well,
then it begins with us, the people of Christ…
It begins with us, as we learn what it means to
live in the Kingdom
of God ,
rather
than the kingdom of violence.
It begins with us, as we explore creative nonviolence
as
an alternative to retribution and retaliation.
But the difficulty we face is that this is not
our natural state!
It
certainly isn’t mine!
Push me, and I’ll push you back.
Bite
me and I’ll bite you too.
Cut
me up and I’ll cut you up as well.
Each of us faces daily pressures to enter once
again
the
cycle which leads to violence,
and choosing the nonviolent path is never an
easy option.
Walter Wink has said: ‘I don’t regard myself as
a pacifist.
I
see myself rather as a violent person trying to become nonviolent.’
And in this he strikes at the heart of the
challenge before us…
Jesus
did not say ‘blessed are the peaceful’
but
‘blessed are the peacemakers’!
Peace at Christmas is not about the absence of
violence,
it’s
not about the suppression of violence,
it’s
not about some pacifist utopian dream where we all love each other.
Rather, peace at Christmas is about turning our
eyes once again
to
the one who comes to us with the clouds of heaven,
in
mystery and majesty,
to
the one who comes to us as the pierced one,
the
one who has suffered violence,
to
the one who comes to us as the prince of peace
to
reveal the kingdom of God on the earth.
It is about turning our eyes once again
to
the one who comes to deconstruct all human power claims,
to
the one who comes to transform the human tendency for violence,
to
the one who offers the nonviolent alternative
to
the cycles of violence which oppress and distort humanity.
Peace
at Christmas is about turning our eyes to the in-breaking kingdom of God
as the future hope for humanity
becomes realised in the present
through the faithful witness of those
who pray for the coming kingdom
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