Sermon.
St Michael and All Angels, Little Ilford, 2 April 2017.
Lent
5 (Year A)
John
11.1-45
Today's
gospel is very obvious good news. A problem is solved. A
tragedy overcome.
- Lazarus has dead.
- Jesus comes along.
- Gd through Jesus raises his from the dead.
- In Jesus, death leads to new life.
There
can be no better story. This is the Easter story, anticipated. What's
not to like?
That
is a fair-enough summary of the gospel today. Sermons throughout the
land will be bringing just this story of hope and newness. It's a
good outline of the message of the gospel-as-a-whole – not just
today's reading, but the Easter gospel - the gospel of Jesus Christ.
And, if that is what you need to hear today, good, then hear it
please:
In
Jesus, death leads to new life.
But...
you notice I am not saying 'Amen', and sitting down. My apologies to
those who would like nothing more than for me to shut up and sit down
(you know who you are and you know that I know who you are). I have
not quite finished, because I want to – need to – add that there
are other elements of the story of Lazarus for those who have eyes to
see. It is not a simple, or a simply happy story.
Let
us try to face up to what is uncomfortable in today's story. I'd like
to suggest that Jesus behaves in three ways which may challenge us.
First,
on being told that Lazarus – Lazarus whom Jesus loves – is ill,
how does Jesus respond?... Let's be blunt: Jesus responds by doing
nothing. He stays where he is. For two more days.
We,
who know the whole story, have an idea why he did this. He did this
so that everyone is absolutely sure that Lazurus is really, utterly
dead. So when the miracle happens, no one can say it is just a
healing of someone at death's door. But note that at the time Jesus
responds by doing nothing, no one around him can know why this is.
So
(can we see?) there is here, for us, too, among the good news, some
hard news. Jesus is free to respond similarly to our own needs (real
though they are), by (from time to time at least) doing nothing. For
this own hidden purposes.
There's
more. On one level, Martha and Jesus have a perfectly understandable
discussion about the resurrection of all who have died. Martha, as a
good Jew influenced by good Pharisees (that's another sermon right
there), says she believes in the resurrection. Jesus says that
resurrection is much, much closer than she realises. But at another
level, Jesus' message is and remains utterly mysterious. 'I am the
resurrection and the life'. Beautiful poetry, no doubt, and much
loved in Christian circles. But if I ask you what it means...?
We
may come up with the idea that it refers to this or that aspect of
later Christian teaching on Jesus. But I for one am unable to tell
you what it means. I cannot see what these words add to the
discussion about the resurrection, or add to the story.
So
(can we see?) there is here, for us too, among the good news, some
hard news. Jesus's message to us can similarly be inscrutable, more
like a riddle than an explanation.
Third,
Jesus loves Lazarus, Lazarus is his friend. Lazarus is about to
undergo the hardest and most shocking moment in his life. So, Jesus,
Lazarus' friend, will be by his side, talking him through it,
encouraging him with friendly words along the way. Right?
Oh,
how wrong. Here is the conversation the two of them have: Jesus said:
'Lazarus, come out!'
That's
it. No conversation, no gentle encouragement. Just the command.
So (can we see?) there is here, for us too, among the good news, some
hard news. Jesus is similarly free to relate to us by giving blunt
commands. 'Do this!'
So,
Jesus is free
- to respond to us by doing nothing,
- to speak things we cannot understand,
- to give simple, unadorned commands.
I
do know that this is unlikely to be new information for you. We are
used to hearing these things, for we understand that Gd in Christ
is in charge and not us, and Christ does not come to us just to
reassure us. We know it. But it can be good for us to look it
straight in the eye, from time to time, as the harder side of the
good news.
But...
in truth, these aspects of the story are really the lesser
challenges. There are two greater painful elements we must face.
Let
us go back to Martha. When Jesus suggests that the stone is rolled
away from the tomb, how does Martha – who believes in the
resurrection, and who believes in Jesus and his capacity to be the
instrument for all manner of miracle – how does she react? With
simple faith? With bated breath?
No,
with simple disgust: 'Already there is a stench'.
Or
(I've come to realise over the years) this is one time people like to
Authorized Version: 'by this time he stinketh!' Yes, Lazarus
stinketh. He stank. Notice, Jesus does not deny this. A corpse in a
sealed tomb, free of fresh oxygen, would by day four, have long begun
to decay, to rot. There would have been a stench, we can be sure.
Here
is a greater warning for us. Brothers and sisters, the gospel for
today, if we can bear it, makes it clear that when Jesus comes to us,
to bring new life out of death – by no means only literal death but
out of all that is deathly and deadening in us - there is
likely to be a stench. All that we have neglected, all that we have
locked away (we think safely), will be brought to the Lord. And it
will not be pretty. We must be prepared to have others see just how
rotten we can be. We stinketh. Gd in Christ can bear that. It
does not stop Gd acting to bring that newness of life (Gd does not
have a delicate constitution). But can we ourselves bear the
stench?
It
gets worse. 'The
dead man came out, his hands and feet bound with strips of cloth, and
his face wrapped in a cloth.'
Let us try to picture this. Lazarus lives (great!), but is blinded
(his face is covered), and is disabled (hands and feet bound). How
would you bind up a corpse? You might just perhaps bind each hand and
each foot separately. But why? To what end? Surely, you would bind
the easy way, turning the corpse into one, tightly bound shape. In
other words, it's like a coffin, only much snugger, with even less
room.
So
Lazarus comes out, stinking and wriggling,
ungainly, comical
even. It's his greatest appearance (he's the icon of a great
miracle), and he appears at his worst.
I
won't labour the point. Here too is a warning for us. In short, if we
want Gd in Christ to make a difference in our lives, where we can
find we often choose what is deadening and deathly, we
had better not care what people think.
We had better not have egos, or precious reputations to protect and
improve. Gd sees us as we are, loves us as we are. The pressing
question is whether
we are up to seeing ourselves,
smelling ourselves (as it were), as we really are.
- Lazarus,
- congregation of St Michael and All Angels,
- Little Ilford
- humanity
come
out!
There
is good news for us here. There is hard, challenging news for us
here. There is Easter here. But there is more to Easter, and to
Lazarus, than a happy ending. Gd raises us from the dead, but raises
us as we really are.
So be it. Amen.