Date
              Sunday, July 18, 2010
           “Get Busy Living”
“Get Busy Living”
Sermon Preached by
The Rev. David McMaster
Sunday, July 18, 2010
Text: 1 John 1:1-4; 2:24-29
Front page  news several Easter's ago. A text was discovered in the Egyptian desert.  A crumbling, ancient papyrus written in Coptic dating from the fourth  century but probably a translation of a mid-late-second century  document. Judas was Jesus favourite disciple, the headlines read. The  newly published, Gospel of Judas, was big news.
The articles caused a stir and to illustrate how words can be used to push sensationalist agendas, Terry Garcia of National Geographic,  described the text by saying, “The codex has been authenticated as a  genuine work of ancient Christian apocryphal literature.” While it is a  true statement, to the average reader, the words, “authenticated” and  “genuine” invoke thoughts of “reliability,” “validity” and even “truth.”  Yet, when the text is examined critically, asking real questions such  as: Is it a true account of Judas' interactions with Jesus? Is it  historical? Do we have to re-evaluate Judas and the whole garden scene  of the Passion on the basis of this manuscript? The answers are, with a  very high degree of certainty, “No, no, and no,” respectively. Yet, the  damage was done. Doubt was laid in minds of those who want to have doubt  and those who do not want to look into the claims with a critical mind.
A similar problem arose with the publication of Dan Brown's best-seller, The Da Vinci Code.  The story is a heady mixture of conspiracy, suspense, religion, sex and  art…. Fictional Harvard professor, Robert Langdon, becomes embroiled  in investigating a series of brutal murders. They turn out to be  connected to a secret society called the Priory of Sion which harbours  the dramatic secret: the Holy Grail is actually the person of Mary  Magdalene and her descendents. Jesus, it is claimed, was married to Mary  Magdalene. Their union was a symbol of a religion that combined both  male and feminine divinity. As Langdon investigates, it comes out that  these “truths” were overwhelmed by “the official version of  Christianity.” The church purportedly concealed the evidence about Jesus  and Mary, suppressed all but four of the many original Gospels, and  eliminated traces of the feminine from the Christian version of God. For  2,000 years, however, an underground movement has kept alive the  evidence of Christianity's supposed true origin and protected the  descendants of Jesus and Mary from the oppression of the official  Church.
The Da Vinci Code is probably one of the most gripping stories I  have come across. It is certainly a good and entertaining novel. I  purchased the later, glossy version with pictures of all the art work  that they interpreted as they were solving the crimes. It was a  beautiful edition. Unequivocally, however, The DaVinci Code is  fiction! Brown said himself that it was fiction however, he proceeded to  give some support his fiction with actual documents. His ideas that,  for instance, Jesus and Mary were married, that the divinity of Jesus  was invented in the 4th century by Emperor Constantine, came from actual  documents and sources. People read Brown and believed the documents and  the interpretation.
But when one actually gets down to reality, the documents used to show  the existence of the secret society, for instance, have proven to be  fraudulent. The thoughts about what is imagined to occur under  Constantine about Jesus' divinity are only supported by a small, radical  group of revisionist scholars. The texts they use to support their  concept of an early, widespread, Christian pluralism are considerably  late, from the later second, third, fourth centuries and beyond. But  again, the damage was done for the many who will not look deeper.
And we could go on. Tom Harpur's book, The Pagan Christ ventures  into an academic never-never-land drawing on sources and the work of  individuals who are little known and have little credibility in studies  of antiquity. Grand assumptions and speculations are made with little or  no support and even church-study groups have been eating it up as true,  factual thoughts about the development of a so-called, Christ-myth.
There is an incredible amount of misinformation, suggestion, and  distortion out there these days. It is masquerading as scholarship and  truth but in reality is far from it. To really get into it all properly  would probably require us to set up a university course in early  Christianity and history. But what can we say within the context of a  summer sermon about Jesus and history? Where can we go?
A couple of thoughts: Think back for a moment to your school days. Think  back to the playground and the things that used to occur. Think back to  one of those playground fights between individuals. I don't know about  you, but I was in one of those once. I never really sought out fights  but on this occasion, I had changed schools for the purpose of playing  football rather than rugby and went immediately into the first XI. It  was great. Immediate recognition until some of the lads who weren't  quite on the team decided to figure out where I stood on the toughness  “totem pole.” It was ridiculous, but big Fergie jumped me. I threw him  off. He tried to get me in a headlock but I kept punching at his every  advance. A crowd was gathering shouting, “fight, fight, fight!” I kept  throwing a punch here and there and moving away. I had learned from  Cassius Clay's rhyme, “float like a butterfly, sting like a bee.” It  took a while but the teachers arrived before much damage was done.  Fergie and I were whisked off to the principal's office for a lesson. I  know it was absolutely deplorable! But that is the schoolyard and these  things become the subject of schoolyard lore for months.
Imagine, if you will another schoolyard: You weren't there but two boys,  Dale and Richard, get into a fight. Your friend, Billy was there and he  tells you that Dale really gave Richard what we used to call “a  lickin'.” A few weeks later, you're out around town and your friend,  Johnny, mentions the big fight between Dale and Richard. “Boy,” says  Johnny, “Dale really got his comeuppance from Richard a few weeks ago.”  “Wait a minute,” you think to yourself. “I thought Dale pounded Richard.  Billy had said so.” So you do a little digging and you find out from  Johnny that he hadn't been there but he had heard from Eric. You ask  Eric and he says that he hadn't been there either but he had heard from  Jim who had been told by Richard's best friend Bob who had been there.  You start to think about it. “Am I to believe Billy who was there, or  Johnny, who wasn't there but had heard about it through Eric, who had  heard through Jim, who had heard from Bob?” All things being equal,  wouldn't you tend to believe Billy? His was the earlier, eyewitness  account.
When we evaluate historical texts as sources, a general rule of thumb is  that earlier is better. A source that derives from a time in close  proximity to the events described is generally to be preferred to later  sources. And so it is with our Gospels and the NT writings. They are  from the first century and ought to be preferred to later, apocryphal  gospels that are now being used by some to revise history. Oh, reporters  will use these things, ever eager to jolt the public into reading their  story, they use the sensational. But what they are really suggesting we  do, in these cases is to believe Johnny's report that he had heard from  Eric, who had heard from Jim (none of whom had been there), who had  heard from a close friend of Richard about the fight. They want us to  accept a mid-second century and later documents over the eye-witness  accounts penned in the first century.
The apostle John opens his writing that we know as 1 John:
We declare to you what was from the beginning, what we have heard, what we have seen with our eyes, what we have looked at and touched with our hands, concerning the word of life—this life was revealed, and we have seen it and testify to it, and declare to you the eternal life that was with the Father and was revealed to us—we declare to you what we have seen and heard so that you also may have fellowship with us; and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ (1:1-3).
But let's think some more, for a source is only as credible as the  credibility of the witness. Getting back to the playground brawl: What  if, for instance, we know that Billy is a downright liar who never tells  things the way they actually were, and what if Johnny, Eric, Jim, and  Bob are relatively normal, trustworthy types. That could change our view  of things. We may even take Johnny's later account as potentially more  valid than Billy's. We would have the opposite view if we knew Billy to  be truthful as opposed to Johnny or any of his sources.
So, what of the credibility of the sources of information about Jesus? If we look at The Gospel of Judas,  for instance, it is interesting that the great Irenaeus, Bishop of  Lyons mentions it in his writings c.180. In his day he was as close as  anyone to Jesus. He wrote of how as a young man he had known the  elderly, Bishop of Smyrna, Polycarp, before he was martyred. And when he  was a young man, Polycarp had known the apostle John when he was quite  old. So Irenaeus was only one step removed from an eye-witness of Jesus.
Irenaeus wrote against heresies of his day, one of which was associated  with a group he called Cainites. The Cainites, he said, did not believe  that the God of the Jews was God at all and when they encountered the  Jewish and Christian sacred writings, they sought out all those who  opposed God and rewrote texts and history in their favour. In other  words, they rewrote the history of individuals like Cain, Esau, Korah,  the people of Sodom, and Judas. Irenaeus says that they produced a  fictional history of this kind, one of which they call The Gospel of Judas. So there is evidence from c.180, that there was a group known to  rewrite texts and history in accordance with their beliefs. It makes  them less than credible.
What about the NT writers? Think of the characters of those who wrote  about Jesus. Think about Peter, James, and John, and even Paul. Each one  went out declaring amazing things about Jesus. Sources close to them  express how they incurred trouble, endured suffering, and even martyrdom  for what they said. They did not get rich from what they taught, they  sought out no gain, they just went forth with the amazing story of Jesus  crucified and risen. In the writings that they have left us, they speak  of truth and honesty, uprightness and justice, love, compassion, and  faith. Would they have put forth lies, while speaking of these things?  NT scholar, Birger Gerhardsson, has stated that the early apostles  appear to have done what they did and produced their writings “in good  faith.”
Think also of Peter and the boys as Christ was being crucified. They  scattered, they denied him, they fled. On that awful Friday that we call  “Good,” a woman said to Peter, “You are one of them.” And Peter  replied, not once, but three times, “I don't know the man,” Think of how  later, Peter became a great man in the church, perhaps even the most  important apostle. He became sought after for his knowledge, witness and  insight, he was lauded and honoured as a servant of God. Why would such  a derogatory account of Peter be in the Gospels? It would have been  quite normal later, when the Gospels reached their final form, to edit  that sort of thing out so as not to defame the great Peter. But it seems  that the early Christian writers were more interested in truth, less  interested in elevating themselves, and more interested in elevating  Jesus and what one could become with Christ. It seems that these people  were telling it as it was even if it meant embarrassing Peter. There is  an integrity to this, an integrity to how they lived and what they  suffered for the sake of the greatest thing they had ever seen in their  lives.
What I'm suggesting here is that we go with Billy's account to  understand what happened in the playground. The NT sources are both  earlier than anything else and have an integrity to them. I think that  these things are why John took the stance he did when he wrote his  letter against those who were, in the latter stages of the first  century, changing things and suggesting that Jesus could not be the  messiah or that the divine could not enter human form (as we discussed  last week). He was appalled at these early revisionists, people who  would change history to fit with their worldview to make Christianity  more palatable to the, then, modern mind. John described them as liars,  antichrists, and he says to his people, “We declare to you what was  from the beginning, what we have heard, what we have seen with our eyes,  what we have looked at and touched with our hands, concerning the word  of life … Let what you heard from the beginning abide in you. If what  you heard from the beginning abides in you, then you will abide in the  Son and in the Father. And this is what he has promised us, eternal life (1:1, 2:24, 25).” He says, we were there, we saw and heard and touched  the word of life, Jesus (1:1ff); we have declared all that happened in  him, do not stray after the thoughts of those who are fusing Jesus with  other religious ideas. That's not what we experienced, “Let what you heard from the beginning abide in you (1:1; 2:24).”
That's not bad advice. “Let what you heard from the beginning abide in you (2:24).” That's not bad advice for us in our day, faced with dubious and sensational claims at every turn. Whether it is The Gospel of Judas rediscovered, or the thoughts implicit to The DaVinci Code, or The Pagan Christ, or anything else, “Let what you heard from the beginning abide in you (2:24).” That's not that we shouldn't think. It's not that we should  accept everything. It's that there is a credibility to what we have had  from the beginning and it will take a lot to move it.
Maybe you recall the series of films, Back to the Future, with a  young Michael J. Fox. In its time they were box office smashes, telling  the convoluted stories of how Marty McFly travelled through time back to  1955 and each time he travelled back something happened that changed  the future and he had to travel back again and again to correct things  that he had done.
In a way, John is telling us, “Go back to the future.” “Let what you heard from the beginning abide in you (2:24).” Maybe what we learned in Sunday School is not that bad. Maybe  what we grew up with in faith is closer to the truth than all the adult,  sophisticated ideas we hear now. Maybe, just maybe, the Gospels and NT  letters are closer to Jesus than some academics would suggest. Maybe the  so-called apocryphal gospels were left out of the NT canon for good  reason as the NT took shape.
When the NT did take shape, the early Christian leaders went back to the  eyewitnesses to guide them into the future. And maybe the way forward  for a church today that is limping along in a sea of doubt and  uncertainty, is to go back to the future. “Let what you heard from the beginning abide in you (2:24).” And maybe then, the faith will have meaning and the transformative power it has had over countless generations.
 
     
   
  