Lent 4 March 22, 2009
THE REAL GOD
The Rev David Kidd
Some of you who are age fifty plus may well remember a television
show called "To Tell the Truth". The panelists on the show were
challenged to pick from among three contestants the one who really was
who he claimed to be. They attempted to discern this by questioning the
contestants about the line of work or the particular talents which the
real person exercised. The results were always interesting, and
sometimes quite surprising.
The chiallenges facing the panelists on the TV show aren’t a whole
lot different from the challenges we face in trying to discern the
"real God" from the biblical record.
Our lesson from the book of Numbers this morning is a good example
of the dilemma which faces us. Is God really Dr Jekyl - the one who
purposely sends poisonous snakes among the people to kill them as
punishment for their impatience and grumbling - or is he Mr Hyde, who
gives Moses the means of healing the people who are bitten? To claim
that he is both is to say at best that God is inconsistent, or that he
acts impulsively rather than rationally. At worst, we make God out to
be bi-polar, careening unpredictably from vengeance and punishment to
mercy and grace.
Deserts are places where poisonous snakes, scorpions, and other
dangerous creatures are pretty common. Could the truth be that the
people just happened to wander into an area with an exceptionally high
concentration of snakes, so many were bitten? If so, then the "real
God" is the one who provides for the healing of the people, in spite of
their rebellious and complaining nature. To me, this God is much more
consistent with the creation stories’ picture of a God who created us
in his own image, pronounced us "good", even though he was fully aware
of our potential for disobedience, and, when Adam and Eve fulfilled
that potential, provided for them even as he cast them out of the
Garden of Eden.
Why, then, would the writers of the Old Testament so often picture
God as vengeful and punishing, insisting on righteous adherence to the
Law, and calling for the anihilation of people whose customs and
beliefs differed from theirs? Could it be that they sought to instill
fear in the people as a means of maintaining control? Could it be that
they sought to justify what we today would certainly call genocide, by
claiming that God explicitly told them to pursue such a course?
At the risk of being labeled a heretic and a traitor to the cause -
along with many of the Old Testament prophets, and even Jesus himself -
I have to state that I believe the answer to both of those questions is
a resounding "Yes!".
I believe that Jesus’ cleansing of the Jerusalem Temple and his
frequent disputes with the Jewish religious authorities constitue his
"Yes" to those two questions. The authorities had to have him crucified
because he was a very real threat to their precious "system". John
tells us as much in his report of the response of the Jewish leadership
to Jesus’ raising of Lazarus: "So the Pharisees and the chief priests
met with the Council and said, ‘What shall we do? Look at all the
miracles this man is performing! If we let him go on in this way,
everyone will believe in him, and the Roman authorities will take
action and destroy our Temple and our nation!’ One of them, named
Caiaphas, who was High Priest that year, said, ‘What fools you are!
Don’t you realize that it is better for you to have one man die for
the people, instead of having the whole nation destroyed?’" (Jn
11:47-50)
The Psalm for today tells the Numbers story from a very different
viewpoint. God acts consistently for the good of his people, even in
the face of their rebellion and sinfulness. Paul’s words to the
Ephesians in our second lesson show God in that same light: "But God,
who is rich in mercy , out of the great love with which he loved us
even when we were (spiritually) dead through our trespasses, made us
alive together with Christ ... ... so that in the ages to come he might
show the immeasureable riches of his grace in kindness toward us in
Christ Jesus." (Eph 2:4-5, 7)
All of this can be translated into those words I had us interject
into the Psalm and the Ephesians passage this morning. "God isn’t mad
at you - no matter what!"
When we make wrong choices things go wrong in our lives. When we
consciously make wrong choices, we sin, and we hurt ourselves and
others. God doesn’t punish us, but he does allow us to suffer the
consequences of our sins. What God wants us to do is to look to him in
faith and change our choices. This is what we call repentance. Through
it, God will change and renew our lives. Jesus, lifted high on the
cross, is our "bronze snake", our healing. Look to him in faith, and
live.