A sermon given at Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church
8 July 2018
Exodus 3.1-14
Hebrews 4.16; 7.19, 25; 6.19-20; 10.19-22
Listen to this sermon here:
https://soundcloud.com/bloomsbury-1/the-accessible-jesus
As a starting point for my sermon this morning,
I’d like to
offer for our consideration
a basic
premise about the nature of God.
I’m aware that in doing so I am, to coin a phrase,
merely a
midget standing on the shoulders of a giant
–
the giant in this case being the entire Judaeo-Christian tradition of theology.
I’ve often described the Bible, both Old and New Testaments,
as being a
series of thought experiments concerning the nature of God,
with succeeding generations of the people of God
trying
different perspectives on the divine on for size, so to speak.
And the great theological traditions of the church
have
continued that process down the millennia,
as people have sought to take the insights of the Bible
and apply
them to their own contexts
in ways
that make God accessible in fresh ways for fresh times.
Even the term ‘theology’, if you unpick its ancient Greek
origin,
simply
means ‘words about God’.
Which brings me to this morning, as together in our small
way,
we attempt
to climb the latest pinnacle of the great mountain of theology,
possibly…
So what words about God can we share today
that will
make God accessible to us, in our time and place?
Well, the premise about the nature of God
that I’d
like us to consider is very simple, and it is this:
‘God is not
me’.
God
is not you. God is not us.
Or, to put it another way,
the
corollary of the negative statement that ‘God is not me’,
is the
positive assertion that ‘God is other’.
And this is a very bold thing to say about God,
because it
flies in the face of so much
that people
might want to assert about God.
Many people these days,
even many
people within the communities of faith that call themselves churches,
are not
really convinced that God is ‘other’.
From the post-enlightenment liberal rationalist,
who asserts
that all our language of God is metaphorical,
to the fundamentalist
who asserts
that God’s word as revealed in scripture is literal;
there is common ground here that God is, in some way,
contained
within human language.
Whether the words we use to speak of God are metaphorical or
literal,
whether our
theology is liberal or conservative,
the functional operating premise of Western Christianity
has been
that God is to be found
in the
words we use to speak of God.
And this can have some disastrous consequences,
because it
means that whoever controls the words, controls God.
The words I and my tribe (I mean, church) use to speak about
God,
will not be
the same as the words
used by the
different tribe (I mean, church) down the road.
And if we have located God’s essence and presence within our
words,
then when
we disagree about our theology,
we are
actually disagreeing not just about words about God,
but about
the very nature and being of God as revealed to humans.
People have fought wars over less,
and
certainly churches and denominations
have
fractured and split over exactly this issue.
So to assert that ‘God is not me’,
to affirm
that ‘God is other’,
is to admit that all our thoughts about God,
all our
ideas and words about God,
all our beliefs and theologies about God,
no matter
how deeply held and carefully conceived,
all of these… are not God.
Because God is not me.
God is
other.
And there is part of me that finds this immensely
comforting,
as well as
deeply challenging.
The thing is, each of us has a tendency to place ourselves
at the
centre of our own world.
We can’t help it – it’s probably a function of the fact
that the
only eyes I have
through
which to view the world are my eyes,
and the
only ears
through
which I can hear the words of others are my ears,
and the
only brain
with
which I can process the information from my senses is my brain.
Of course I’m the centre of my own world,
just as of
course you are the centre of yours.
Philosophically speaking,
there is a
genuine question to be asked here
about
whether there is anything at all
beyond
the personal, subjective perception of reality.
This is what is known as ontology,
the
question of whether only that which can be perceived exists.
The only evidence I have
of a world
beyond my own thoughts and imaginings
is the
evidence of my own senses,
which
are both subjective and flawed.
There is a chance that you are merely a figment of my
imagination,
or possibly
that I am merely a figment of yours.
Or maybe we are all living inside a computer simulation?
If that
sounds far-fetched, think again.
There is a strong case for arguing that the technology to do
this
is now so
close that it makes it almost inevitable,
and if it is inevitable who is to say that it hasn’t already
happened
and we’re
it?
And if nothing exists beyond my own perception of reality,
whether
that be biologically or virtually perceived,
then God, once again, becomes nothing more
than an
extension of my own psyche.
And so, once again, I want to say very clearly,
that ‘God
is not me’. God is other.
This is not a new insight, of course,
because as
the teacher of Ecclesiastes famously said,
‘there is
nothing new under the sun’.
The insight that God is other to us
is there
within the theological tradition;
and the story of Moses and the burning bush
is the
classic, perhaps the definitive, example of this.
When Moses hears and sees God,
the voice
is not heard in his own head,
this is no
still small voice, or gentle whisper barely heard.
Rather, the voice of God is personified as an angel,
speaking
from a bush that burns but does not burn away.
God, in this story, is not Moses. God is other.
And this poses something of a problem for Moses,
as it does
for all of us who have sought
to
encounter God as other to ourselves.
How on earth does one draw near to a God
whose being
is so utterly alien and other
to
our own experience and perception of reality
that our
words and thoughts cannot contain it?
When Moses realises that he has strayed into the territory
of the divine other,
that he is
standing, so to speak, on holy ground,
he hides
his face because he is afraid to look at God.
And I think I’m with Moses here.
It is a
fearful thing to admit to our minds the idea of God as other.
We have no idea how to conceive of a God
who does
not, at some level, look or behave like us.
The language of the burning bush is intentionally othering
– it is a
thing most wonderful, almost to wonderful to be –
and it leaves us, with Moses, confused and afraid.
How can Moses, how can we, draw near
to a God
who is so utterly other to us?
But the God of the burning bush won’t leave Moses alone;
he speaks
to Moses of the suffering of his people,
of freedom
and an end to oppression.
God draws decisively near to Moses,
even as
Moses does not know how to draw near to God.
And again, this is a profound insight.
So much of what passes for Christian spirituality
is about us
finding ways of drawing near to God;
through
prayer, meditation, and the disciplines of spiritual observance.
Now please don’t hear me wrong here, by the way.
I’m not
opposed to the practice of prayer, or meditation,
or
any of the other spiritual disciplines.
But we do
need to be clear that any encounter we may have
with
the God who is not us,
will
never originate from within us.
To think
that by our efforts, however well intentioned,
we
can access the presence of God,
is
to create God within our own frame of reference.
And as I’ve been trying to say very clearly,
any God
that we create through our own words and efforts
is not,
actually, God.
The insight of Moses encountering the burning bush
is that God
draws near to us,
that
God speaks to us from beyond,
and that
God enters into our world of suffering, oppression, and violence
to
bring freedom, and healing, and peace.
These are not blessings that we can summon up ourselves,
they always
come to us from beyond our own frame of reference.
In fact, it is the very nature of God as other to us
that is the
crucial factor here.
All inter-human attempts at bringing into being a new world
are doomed
to failure,
because for all our ingenuity and brilliance
there is
one thing we cannot change.
We cannot change ourselves.
We cannot
save ourselves from our human nature.
Selfishness will always out,
because we
are fundamentally selfish beings.
It is only a God who speaks to us from beyond ourselves,
calling us
to enter holy ground that is not of our construction,
who
can save us from ourselves,
and
from our repeating cycles of selfish ambition.
So who is this God who is other?
That is Moses’ next question;
as if the
activity of God in calling him to a new place of holiness
had not already
revealed enough
about
the nature of the one who is beyond our imagining.
Moses wants a name.
He wants
syllables to speak and words to utter.
He wants to turn divine encounter into theology.
And so God gives him a name: ‘I AM WHO I AM’.
God is. God
is not Moses.
God
is not an idol. God is not a man, or a woman.
God is not
an idea or a concept or an ideology.
God
is not me. And God is not you.
God just
is.
God
is who God is, as God says to Moses.
It is, I think, the most profound statement of theology in
human history,
that the
only words that can adequately capture
the
essence of the mystery of the divine
are
themselves words of mystery.
Because God, you see, does not exist in words of human
construction.
Rather God
is encountered in relationship,
in
the call that each of us receives
that takes
us beyond ourselves
and
our finite subjective frame of reference
and onto
the holy ground of the presence of the other,
who
speaks into the human heart
words
and ideas of justice, love, peace, and freedom,
that can
never arise purely from within us
but
must always come to us from beyond.
And this is how God is encountered,
not through
our efforts,
but
by grace and invitation,
and by the
one who is other
making
their presence and nature known to us.
Which brings me, at last, to the sermon to the Hebrews,
and our
title for today: ‘The Accessible Jesus’.
You will remember from the sermons we’ve already had
in our
series on Hebrews
that the people in the congregation it was written for had a
problem,
which was
that they were struggling to relate to God.
The teachings and actions of Jesus, which had brought God
close,
were
rapidly receding into the past,
and the God they worshipped in the name of Jesus
was now
high up in heaven,
distant and
aloof from the triumphs and tribulations,
the
joys and the sorrows, of their day to day lives.
And so the preacher of Hebrews is offering them a variety of
ways
in which
they can experience the presence of Jesus
with them
day by day.
And in this collection of verses we have before us today,
we see a
picture of Jesus as the one who bridges the gap
between
God and humans.
Whilst none of us can, by our own efforts, enter the
presence of God,
it is the
action of God in sending Jesus
that
once-and-for-all opens the doorway between earth and heaven.
The invitation to step onto holy ground,
offered to
Moses by the voice from the burning bush,
is offered to all people by the person of Jesus,
God-made-flesh.
The God who is not me, and is not you,
is made
known in Jesus.
The God who is other, draws near to us in Jesus
and invites
us to draw near to him.
The revelation that begins with Moses on a mountain in Sinai
finds its
fulfilment in a stable in Bethlehem,
and
on a cross outside Jerusalem,
and
in an empty tomb in a garden.
But, lest we fall back into the error
of creating
God in our own image,
it is not the stories of Jesus which save us,
neither is
it the words of the gospels
which are
good news for all people.
Jesus cannot be contained in letters and books.
Jesus is
not found in human words, however inspired.
Rather Jesus is God’s word,
spoken to
humanity so definitively
that the new world of love, justice, peace and freedom that
he proclaims
echoes
throughout all of human history
as a
clarion call from beyond ourselves
to
recognise that we are not all that there is to this universe,
and that
there is one who is beyond us
who
calls us in love to take the step of faith
onto
the holy ground of love.
All that is required of us are humble hearts,
open to
receive the gift of Christ
that
saves us from ourselves
by breaking
into our subjective, insular, selfish souls
with
an invitation to a new way of being human
where,
astonishingly and miraculously,
we
are no longer at the centre of our own existence.
It is an invitation to a life where we love our neighbour
as much as
we love ourselves,
and where we love God who is not us,
with all
our heart, and mind, and soul, and strength.
The accessible Jesus is the one who opens the pathway
between us
and the God who is not us,
who invites us into the presence of the divine other
through no
effort on our part.
In Jesus, God reaches out in love to save us from ourselves
in ways
that we can never manage by our own efforts.
And this is not an exclusive gift,
offered
only to the chosen few who in some way deserve it,
or have
earned it through holy living or careful study.
The love of God made manifest in Jesus
is a
universal love that is extended to all people, in all places, in all times.
The word ‘universalism’ gets a bad press amongst Christians,
as if it
were a marker of heresy.
But I’d like to reclaim it,
and invite
you to rejoice with me that God’s love is universal,
and that
Christ died for all, and was raised for all,
so
that each and every person, and indeed the whole of creation itself,
can find
its true nature and purpose
within
the love of the God who is beyond us.
And as a thought to close,
I find
myself wondering why Christians spend so much time
trying
to define God in human words,
arguing
over who’s right and who’s wrong,
over
issues of orthodoxy or heresy,
over who’s
in and who’s out,
over
whether there are some people who God loves,
and
some whom he judges.
It seems pretty clear to me that through Jesus,
all people
are brought within the love of God.
Good news for one must be good news for all,
or it is
not good news.
And if we seek to keep the good news of the love of God from
some,
we in turn
withhold it from ourselves.
That is the judgment of God.
But this new kingdom of God is a kingdom with no barriers,
it is a
city with no walls, a nation with no borders.
So each of us are invited onto the holy ground before the
burning bush,
to discover
that God who is not us
speaks
words to us of love, acceptance,
forgiveness,
freedom, and justice.
And each of us are then invited, with Moses,
to take the
next step of faith,
and start living the kingdom of God into being in our world,
living as
if it were true,
until it is
true.
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