Friday, 19 April 2019

Jesus, remember me


A Sermon for Good Friday, 19 April 2019, 
Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church



Luke 23.42-43

Listen to this sermon here: https://soundcloud.com/bloomsbury-1/jesus-remember-me

Then the criminal who was dying on the cross alongside Jesus
            uttered his last words:
            "Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom."

As famous last words go, they’re pretty good.
            After all, not everyone gets their final words recorded in the Bible.

As a slight digression,
            I spent a few minutes looking up other famous last words,
            and I wonder if you can guess who said these:

·        “Friends applaud, the comedy is finished.” - Beethoven
·        “Tomorrow I shall no longer be here.” - Nostradamus
·        "I’m bored with it all.” - Winston Churchill
·        “I should have never switched from Scotch to Martinis.” - Humphrey Bogart

·        "Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom." - ???

Well, we don’t know his name, or his crime,
            merely that he died alongside Jesus,
            and that he had a moment of profound insight
                        as he faced the hour of his death.

I don’t know if you’ve given much thought to what happens when you die?
            It’s one of those things that personally, on the whole,
                        I try not to think about too often.
            I mean, I am aware that one day I shall, as Shakespeare put it
                        in Hamlet’s great soliloquy on death,
                        ‘shuffle off this mortal coil’…
            But what then…?
                        What next…?

Some might say that we go straight to heaven, and they might be right;
            some say that we go to Limbo or to Hell,
                        and I’m less sure that they’re right.

But I’m still none the wiser as to what it all really means,
            because I’m not sure I really know what heaven is anyway.

As Jesus replied to the Pharisees,
            when they asked him their trick question
            about what would happen to the one bride for seven brothers,
            ‘It’s not like that’…. (Luke 20.27-40)
            (And here, you understand, I am paraphrasing slightly).

It seems to me that a healthy agnosticism about the nature of the afterlife
            is both biblical and Christ-like.
Sometimes, not being quite sure
            is infinitely preferable to being very sure,
and some of the most terrifying Christians I’ve met over the years,
            are those who have certainly
            about where people are going, or not going, when they die.

Better, surely, to trust to God’s love and mercy,
            and then live in the light of that.

As Jesus did say, ‘God is God not of the dead, but of the living;
            for to him all of them are alive.’ (Luke 20.38)

And so we come to the last words of the criminal on the cross, and Jesus’ reply.

"Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom."
"Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in Paradise."

And I’ve been wondering this week, as I’ve been preparing this sermon,
            what it might mean for us to be remembered by Jesus.
What does it mean for us to exist, eternally, in the memory of God,
            who enters into our humanity,
                        dies our death,
                        and never forgets any of it.

There is a way of thinking about death
            that sees our souls fluttering away from our bodies,
                        like caged birds set free,
            flying up to heaven to be with Jesus on a cloud.

But the problem with this is that this owes far more
            to the ancient philosophy known as dualism
            than it does to the Jewish-Christian tradition.

Dualism suggests that there is a fundamental separation
            between our souls and our bodies,
that our bodies are merely temporary homes
            for the eternal spark that is our souls.

And whilst this is a very ancient way of looking at things,
            coming from Greek philosophy and the teachings of Plato,
it isn’t something we find clearly in the Christian scriptures.
            You kind of have to read it in,
                        if you’re going to see it there.

The Jewish tradition, from which Christianity emerged,
            has a far more unified view of the human person.
We are not a mortal body containing an immortal soul,
            but rather each of us is a person, body and soul in unity,
            created and loved entirely and eternally by God.

So when we die, it is the entirety of our being that enters into God’s eternity.

In his first letter to the Corinthians,
            Paul speaks of the resurrection body being like a plant
            that grows from a seed that is sown into the ground.

The physical body, the body we have in this life,
            is like the seed,
and the physical death we must all face,
            is the action of being cast into the ground,
and the resurrection we share with Christ,
            is both as continuous and yet different
            as the beautiful flower that grows from a tiny seed.

As Paul says,
‘It is sown a physical body, it is raised a spiritual body.
If there is a physical body, there is also a spiritual body.’ (1 Cor 15.44)

This is not some dualistic discontinuity;
            rather, who we are in eternity
            is in direct continuity with who we are temporally.
Our eternal existence, our spiritual body,
            is as unrecognisably different as the plant is from the seed,
            but it is still the same being.

We do not cast off our earthly bodies,
            to get new ones in heaven.

Rather, who we are eternally
            arises directly from who we are today.

And so we are back to the criminal’s last words from the cross:

"Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom."
"Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in Paradise."

John Polkinghorne, the brilliant physicist and Anglican clergyman,
            who has offered some profound insights
            in the unity of spirituality and quantum physics
once said:

‘I believe it is a perfectly coherent hope, that the pattern that is me
            will be remembered by God
and its instantiation will be recreated by God
            when God reconstitutes me
            in a new environment of God’s choosing.’

In other words, who we are is remembered by God,
            and held fast eternally by God
            as part of God’s creative, dynamic being.

God remembers us,
            and everyone who has ever lived has a place in God’s mind.

In his second letter to the Corinthians,
            Paul speaks of those who follow Christ as being ‘in Christ’,
and he says,
‘If anyone is in Christ, there is a new creation:
everything old has passed away;
see, everything has become new!’ (2 Cor 5.17)

We are in God through Christ,
            we are remembered by God at the hour of our death,
            as Jesus remembered the criminal dying on the cross alongside him.

Nothing is lost, everything is redeemed,
            all sins are forgiven,
            and eternity is ours.

"Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom."
"Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in Paradise."

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