4 Epiphany February 1, 2009
SENT FOR THE KINGDOM The Rev David Kidd
John’s Gospel describes Jesus’ first post-resurrection
appearance to his gathered disciples in these words: (Read John
20:19-23)
I believe the key words for us as members of His Body, the Church,
are these: "As the Father sent me, so I send you. ... ... Receive the
Holy Spirit." (Jn 20:21-22) Jesus gathers us to himself in order to
send us out into the world to BE the Good News of God’s love, not
just to talk about it. It’s not what we do FOR the Church, it’s
what we do AS the Church that allows us and those around us to
experience God’s Kingdom present here and now. We don’t bring the
Kingdom to the world. It’s already here! It always has been and
always will be.
The first words spoken by Jesus in Mark’s Gospel are "The right
time has come, and the Kingdom of God is near! Turn away from your sins
and believe the Good News!" (Mk 1:15) Jesus wastes no time in
Demonstrating the power and the presence of the Kingdom he proclaims.
Mark tells us this morning, "...and on the next Sabbath Jesus went to
the synagogue and began to teach. The people who heard him were amazed
at the way he taught, for he wasn’t like the teachers of the Law;
instead, he taught with authority." (Mk 1:21-22)
The teachers of the Law were men who were products of the rabinnical
schools of the time. Their teachings were always couched in the
traditions of Hebrew scholarship. "According to Gamaliel," they would
say, this is how you should act in this situation in order to live
according to this particular law of Moses." Contrast that to the
formula Jesus uses time and again in Matthew’s account of the Sermon
on the Mount: "You have heard that it was said ... ... But now I tell
you ... " Jesus uses this formula no less than six times in rapid fire
succession (Mt 5:21-44) as he offers his take on the interpretation of
the Mosaic Law - the very bedrock of Jewish religious practice.
Continuing from Mark’s Gospel this morning, Jesus then proceeds to
demonstrate that the Kingdom is more than just talking a good game.
(Read Mark 1:23-29)
We tend to pooh-pooh the idea of evil spirits in our age of modern
medicine and psychiatry, but I’m not so sure we should. Evil is a
very real presence in this world of ours, and it’s very much a human
problem, not something which is endemic to the natural world itself.
Earthquakes, volcanoes, hurricanes, and blizzards can be catastrophic
in their consequences, but they are a necessary part of what it takes
to make this earth a living planet. Without them, life as we know it
could not exist.
Evil is rooted in man’s inhumanity to man. The Letter of James
speaks of it in these words: "For God cannot be tempted by evil, and he
himself tempts no one. But a person is tempted when he is drawn away
and trapped by his own evil desire. Then his evil desire conceives and
gives birth to sin; and sin, when it is full grown, gives birth to
death." (Jas 1:13-15)
Not a pretty picture, is it? And yet, my own experience of life
tells me that what James says is true. Fortunately, James doesn’t
leave us there. He goes on to describe for us the basis of the Kingdom
Jesus proclaimed - God’s infinite goodnes and grace towards us: "Do
not be deceived, my dear brothers and sisters. Every good gift and
every perfect present comes from heaven; it comes down from God, the
Creator of the heavenly lights, who does not change or cause darkness
by turning. By his own will he brought us into being through the word
of truth, so that we should have first place among all his creatures."
(Jas 1: 16-18)
Being Christian - being the Church - is sharing with ALL who come to
us the goodness and generosity God has poured out on us. Every act of
kindness, of compassion, of caring we perform in Jesus’ name to "one
of the least of these my brothers and sisters" is a sign of God’s
Kingdom among us.
What will you do this week to make God’s Kingdom present "... on earth as it is in heaven"?