A sermon for Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church25 July 2021
Psalm 88
Matthew 27.45-50
Michel de Montaigne, the great philosopher of the French Renaissance,
famously said that
‘The ceaseless labour of your life is to build the house of death.’
we find ourselves hearing the words of someone
who is themselves face-to-face with the reality of death.
and it reminds us that we are all on a journey that can only end in one way,
which is, of course, the ending of our own lives.
Psalm 88 offers no glimmer of light,
there is no sudden ‘turn to praise’,
no remission from its bleak and angry cry of pain.
someone whose daily experience is no better than death.
as to what the cause of the writer’s distress might be,
but I’m sure we all recognise the symptoms they are describing.
that steal our sleep
and in its place plant seeds of doubt and anxiety.
facing anxious thoughts, and feelings of dread.
as their energy saps and their faculties wane.
someone distanced from their family, friends, and support structures.
as like being already dead,
beyond hope, cut off from life.
to describe their experience of lifeless futility.
and in v.4 and 6 they say they have been put into the depths of the Pit.
and they describe the darkness and loneliness of the grave.
where fiery suffering is experienced as a punishment for sins committed,
or as an atonement for transgression.
is used to capture the writer’s sense of being cut off:
cut off from the land of the living,
cut off from God,
cut off from all that makes for life.
that comes down to us from the ancient Hebrew tradition,
I wonder what the ‘Pit’ might be in your life?
I wonder what the language of ‘Sheol’ might mean for you?
Maybe it’s relationship breakdown, or bereavement?
Maybe it’s debilitating feelings, perhaps of shame or guilt?
what, I wonder, is the Pit that you fear?
and have plumbed the deep depths of despair?
and found yourself powerless to resist it?
desperate for release,
and angry and hurt and confused that other people seem able to carry on living
while you are cut off, consigned, and condemned
to a very different kind of existence.
then maybe this is a Psalm for you?
is that the writer is abundantly clear,
that the cause of their lifeless experience is none other than God.
as the Psalmist directs their litany of complaint towards God:
· [I am] cut off from your hand.
· You have put me in the depths of the Pit
· Your wrath lies heavy upon me,
· you overwhelm me with all your waves.
· You have caused my companions to shun me;
· you have made me a thing of horror to them
· LORD, why do you cast me off?
· Why do you hide your face from me?
· I suffer your terrors; I am desperate.
· Your wrath has swept over me;
· your dread assaults destroy me.
· You have caused friend and neighbor to shun me.
is fair and square with God.
and who has come to the firm conclusion,
that the cause of their distress lies unambiguously in God’s court.
when I was preaching on Psalm 1
and I introduced us to the idea of the Deuteronomic perspective?
that a person’s suffering is the result of their actions in some way,
a consequence of their sin or lack of faithfulness?
such as the book of Job,
where a person’s suffering is absolutely NOT presented
as the consequence of the sufferer’s actions.
that argues against the Deuteronomic perspective.
there is nothing in their life
that means they deserve what’s happening to them.
is that God is the cause of their pain, the source of their darkness;
that God has driven them into the Pit, and left them there.
addressed at God for God’s actions.
Or, more properly, anger at God for God’s lack of action.
there is no rod and staff to comfort,
there is no table being prepared in the presence of the writer’s enemies.
and so, the writer of Psalm 88 concludes, God is culpable.
there are no speculative answers to the question of theodicy,
of how a good God can permit the righteous to suffer.
there is no promise that God is a strength and a refuge,
God is not spoken of as an ever present help in times of trouble.
of an experience of God’s absence in the face of life’s difficulties.
and despite their rage against God, for God’s inaction and inactivity,
and despite their accusation that God is liable for their plight,
the writer of Psalm 88 continues to address God.
the final clinching proof of the nonexistence of God.
Atheism is only a step away.
or for rejecting religion altogether,
is the problem of suffering.
You have to account for bone cancer in children.”
so also the writer of Psalm 88
refuses to deny God’s existence on the basis of his wretchedness.
but God is not let off the hook.
in the midst of their pain have discovered,
sometimes the only place to direct anger at God,
is at God.
railing against the injustice of their life.
generation after generation,
so the Psalmist of Psalm 88 refuses to give up
crying out to an absent God
the truth of their experience of injustice.
God remains silent and distant in this Psalm.
If you want a happy ending, read a different Psalm.
and the answer is surely that it absolutely has to be there,
because for some of us, this is exactly our experience of life.
because it is faith facing the life of suffering.
and cut off from all that previously made life worthwhile?
at the God who allows, no, who causes, their pain?
It tells us that even from the bottom of the Pit,
God can still be addressed;
it shows us that even if what is said is pure unadulterated anger,
God can still be addressed;
it demonstrates that even if God remains silent towards us,
we do not have to remain silent towards God.
with Jesus uttering his cry of dereliction,
itself a quote from the opening of another Psalm:
"My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?"
of God’s action in Jesus at the crucifixion,
and it gives the lie to every theology of glory,
it exposes as inadequate every theology of easy resolution,
and it questions every theology of ready answers.
and indeed the experience of Jesus himself,
is that life is shameful rather than admirable,
unsettled rather than resolved,
and full of doubt rather than certainty.
the cross is the moment of divine abandonment.
into the depths of human suffering, tragedy, and loss.
in the face of divine desertion.
are called to continue speaking into the darkness,
to continue speaking against the darkness,
to faithfully articulate our anger, our pain,
and our rage against the overwhelming futility of life.
to speak the painful truth:
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
as it offers us a moment of absolute realism
in a book of stories of faith.
which avoid the easy, cheap talk of resolution.
their sole task is to continue to address God
even in the face of God’s unresponsive absence.
is to speak, shout, and cry to God at the injustice of it all.
not in any certainty that God will even hear our cry,
but because the injustice needs to be named.
is the Canadian singer songwriter Bruce Cockburn.
Got to kick at the darkness 'til it bleeds daylight
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