Readings: Job 38:1-7; Hebrews 5:1-10; Mark 10:35-45 Two
incongruous themes are interwoven throughout the readings.
We are reminded once again that the Church is meant to be a
serving church in the world, that greatness comes through service; but
we are reminded also that service does not come without suffering.
Being good and living righteously do not mean that we will not
suffer. There is no short
cut to God’s favour. Indeed,
the path to glory is one that, more often than not, requires that the
innocent must suffer. Job
struggles to understand why he is suffering while he continues to serve
God. He calls on all of his
resources, his friends, family and neighbours.
They have many suggestions for him.
“Look at the evil in yourself! Blame God! Give up!”
But through it all he remains faithful to God.
In one of the most poignant passages of the Old Testament, God
speaks to him out of the chaos and disorder.
And from those words of wisdom come the order and clarity that
Job needs. “What
right,” God asks him, “do you have to question me?
Do you presume to know the whole picture?
Were you present at creation?
What would this chaos be like if you were in charge?”
Job realizes that not only does he lack knowledge; he is
powerless before God. Who
of us has not felt that awesome presence of God as we struggle to bring
order to the chaos in our own lives?
The
writer of the letter to the Hebrews presents Jesus as the Great High
Priest. There is a
difference though between Jesus and the rabbinical High Priests.
For Jesus is both fully human and fully divine.
It is that which enables him to identify fully with us in our
weakness. Through his own
suffering he knows the full extent of human suffering.
He understands our human frailty, its limitations, its trials.
His suffering brings us into direct relationship with God.
In
the Gospel, the disciples are trying to manipulate Jesus.
“Promise us something!” they ask him.
“What
is it you want me to do for you?” And
they ask, “Let us sit, one at your right hand and one at your left, in
your glory.” Don’t you
have to ask yourself where they have been all this time?
Have they ever listened to one thing Jesus has told them?
Do they understand what is at stake?
And
Jesus tells them why he came.
“For the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to
give his life a ransom for many.”
His life is one of service and suffering.
He sets before them the example of true greatness.
Jesus overturns ordinary values in society.
Authority comes through service.
Through his innocent suffering he serves humanity and alleviates
the sinful suffering of those who follow him.
To
be human is to suffer. It
is one of the conditions of human existence.
It continues to be one of the most difficult faith questions for
us to deal with. Why does
God not simply change the human condition?
Is suffering God’s will? If
we say that suffering is God’s will, what do we mean?
Do we mean that God intends that we suffer?
That God causes suffering? That
God brings about suffering for our own good?
It is certainly inferred when people say that sickness or trouble
are the result of sin. Job’s
friends gave him that message quite clearly. It
is not helpful to a person struggling with cancer to hear that it is
God’s will. It is not
helpful to a woman involved in an abusive marriage to hear that she must
go back to her abuser because it is God’s will.
It is not helpful to our Aboriginal people to hear that their
poverty and difficulties came about because they needed to turn to
Christianity. Such teaching
– and I assure you that none of the examples I’ve given are
fictitious – turns the Church into an oppressor.
And that is contrary to the message that we are called to be a
serving church. There
must be another way to explain suffering.
Is it that God is able to give meaning to our suffering?
Is God able to use suffering as part of God’s plan for
creation? Then how do we
draw the line between suffering that is part of creation’s goodness
and suffering that is harmful. The line must surely be drawn at the point at which suffering
ceases to serve life. It does not serve life for a victim of abuse to
stay in an abusive relationship. It
does not serve life for our native people to continue to live in
poverty. Such suffering
requires repentance on the part of the perpetrator.
It requires societal change.
There
are times when suffering, either our own or that of someone close to us,
brings us closer to God; when we feel God’s presence breaking though
to us. If that were not so,
we wouldn’t be gathered here in this church.
It happens like that moment when the sun breaks through the
clouds and the rainbow forms in the sky.
All of the conditions are right.
We see God’s glory so clearly at that point that we find
ourselves in God’s very presence.
Such times of deep spiritual clarity help us to know God’s
presence when times are difficult.
It is the kind of experience that Job had as God spoke out of the
chaos of the whirlwind. It
brings order to the chaos. My
good friend Jo was dying of cancer.
She asked her friends to pray for healing for her.
We all did, faithfully believing that God was listening to our
prayers. A few weeks before she died, she asked us to begin praying in
a different way. “I know
that God is answering my prayer,” she told us.
“I know because more and more each day I feel God present with
me.” Those last days of
her life were very peaceful. It
wasn’t that she gave up. It
was more that she allowed us to glimpse the wonder of God that she was
experiencing. As we prayed
for her, we felt a deep sense of peace.
We felt comforted and strengthened.
It
is important for us to know that God participates in human suffering.
We need to know that nothing can separate us from God’s
participating love. We need
to really know it, because to know it is to be a vital part of God’s
response to human suffering. Suffering
is part of our world. We
see it in peoples’ daily struggle against sickness, poverty, disease.
We see it in the indifference, the hatred, the exploitation that
exist in our world. But our
faith provides us with a process to deal with suffering, and ultimately
to come closer to God. We
need to renew, to recharge our faith from time to time, to make certain
that we keep the faith. There will be wounds, even scars to remind us of the wounds.
But there will also be grace that brings us closer to God.
O
God, grant us the serenity and peace of knowing that you are always with
us. Amen.
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