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Sermon Sunday 1 March 2015 Lessons Genesis 17: 1 – 7, 15 – 16 Romans 4: 13 – 25 St Mark 8: 31 – 38 Prayer of Illumination Let us pray. Encircle us in Your love. Draw us ever nearer; may we know the ruach, the breath of life, in our lungs, Your Spirit filling our soul to overflowing. In Jesus name, we pray. Amen. Just over two weeks ago, I was a guest of the University of Edinburgh Humanist Society, part of a panel of four. The Society was celebrating Darwin Day with an evening discussion. One of the questions which I faced concerned the death of Jesus. The student said, ‘Do you believe that Jesus died for your sins? I thought Jesus’ death was part of God’s plan. I thought he had to die?’ With grace, I replied, ‘No! No! No! No! That’s ghastly theology; you don’t want to go there!’ It is no condemnation of the student that she thought this. She will find it almost everywhere in Church life: in theology, liturgy, sermons and hymns. In the seventeenth century hymn, ‘O Sacred Head! sore wounded’, we sing the lines: Thy grief and bitter Passion were all for sinners’ gain; mine, mine was the transgression, but thine the deadly pain. 1 In Charles Wesley’s magnificent hymn, ‘And can it be’, we sing: And can it be, that I should gain an interest in the Saviour’s blood? Died he for me, who caused his pain – for me, who him to death pursued? Jesus’ death is foundational for Christianity and there is a widespread understanding that He died in our place: Jesus paid the price for our sins. In my view, this theology is an obstacle to evangelism in the 21st century. It is an obstacle because it portrays God as a potentate who demands blood for offences He has suffered: our sins have offended Him and He demands a blood sacrifice. Known as substitutionary atonement, because Jesus is our substitute, He dies the death we deserve, God’s forgiveness is ‘applied’ to us. In this theology, Christ is an atoning sacrifice and, on account of Jesus’ death, a propiation or ransom for sin, God chooses to see us as righteous. His wrath is satisfied. I’m almost embarrassed explaining this theology because it is well past its ‘sell by date’ and, in some sense, is immoral. I do not mean to mock those of previous generations who believed it or those who believe it in our time, but it is a theological argument which no longer works. It is damaging the Church. It is particularly prevalent in 2 the Protestant traditions but, crucially, the theology of substitutionary atonement does not go back to the Bible. Some of the words may be there, such as ransom, but the theology is not. The theology started with Anselm of Canterbury in 1097. It was based on a legal model of retributive justice. Like every human discipline, theological understanding must evolve and reform. In the Gospels, Jesus was killed by the Roman authorities because He was deemed to be a threat to the state: He died a terrorist, albeit a man of non-violence. He was crucified: a very public, humiliating death. The message of crucifixion was clear for all to see: Rome was saying, ‘This is what happens to those who challenge us.’ The history of His death is that He was killed by the powers that ruled the world, not as a payment for our sins. Within substitutionary atonement, another word used or misused is ‘sacrifice’. Jesus’ death is understood as a sacrifice made to God in the same way priests in the Old Testament made a sacrifice of a lamb to God but the Old Testament sacrifice had nothing to do with sin. The word ‘sacrifice’ means ‘to make sacred’. In killing the lamb, offering it to God, the meat was made sacred. It was 3 then eaten by the community; as a sacred meal, it was one they shared with God. I could go on about the theology of Anselm of Canterbury but my point is that, as prevalent as it is within and outwith the Church, it is time to ditch substitutionary atonement. It is time to ditch it because it obscures the real meaning of faith. A forgiveness which is ‘done to us’ is one which leaves us unchanged when, in fact, the central focus of all the world’s great religions, including Christianity, is about inner change, change within us, transformation. Substitutionary atonement makes sin, forgiveness and the afterlife the centre of faith: they are not. What matters is our transformation and, in turn, the transformation of the world around us. Jesus never asked His followers to believe in a creed or His divinity. Instead, He called them to ‘faith’. In Greek, the word is pistis, which means ‘trust, loyalty, engagement, commitment.’ He called them to live in a way which was and is different from the world. Of course, we are of the world and must meet our obligations in the world but, at the same time, we are to detach ourselves from its values, its idols, its seductive gifts of power, 4 status and wealth, and attach ourselves to the Holy. Jesus called His followers to live a life of holiness. He told them that pistis, a life of faith, a life centred on God, could move mountains. It is perfectly legitimate for theology to evolve and reform. Within the Jewish tradition, in the years after the destruction of the Temple, in the first century AD, there is a story told of a rabbi, Rabbi Akiva. Akiva was said to have great insight; he was skilled at re-interpreting Scripture. The original intentions of the authors did not concern him. Moses decided to come down from heaven to hear the rabbi for himself. He entered one of Akiva’s classes and sat at the back, in the eighth row behind the other students. Moses could not understand anything of what Akiva taught about the Jewish Torah which had been revealed to Moses on Mount Sinai. Moses said, ‘My sons have surpassed me’ and he made his way back to heaven. Evolution is there within Judaism; Christianity needs to let go of its crazy search for the original meaning, and let the Spirit speak now. Jesus called His followers to a living faith. In the Early Church, the sacraments of Baptism and Communion were said to be mysteries: they were experiences to be entered into which, 5 through reflection and meditation, would lead the followers to a ‘change of mind.’ Followers were to look beneath the literal meaning of the words, look beneath the symbols, and let themselves imaginatively encounter the Sacred, the Divine Spirit, to which they point. The late Marcus Borg said that there are three ways of seeing religion. The first is the absolutist way, in which one believes that one’s own religion is the truth, and no other. The second is the reductionist way, in which one reduces religion to a human invention, a human projection or construct, and nothing more. The third is the sacramental way, in which religions are not absolute and the human construct we call religion is a response to experiences of the sacred. In understanding religion as sacrament, we use words and finite means to mediate the Holy. Borg said, “Each of the enduring religions is a mediator of ‘the absolute’, but [none of the religions are themselves absolute].” Using the metaphor of paths up a mountain, each world religion starts at a different point, emerging from different cultures and language, but the nearer we get to the top, the more the religions converge. The more we leave behind the particularity of doctrine, 6 culture and language, the more we see that, at their core, each world faith is about inner transformation. In the writing of St Paul, dying and rising with Christ are metaphors for personal and communal transformation. Paul said, ‘I have been crucified with Christ; and it is no longer I who live, but it is Christ who lives in me.’ This is the whole point of faith: the worldly Paul is dead and the new Paul, united with God in Christ, is born. Let me close with this. In fourth century Jerusalem, those who came forward for baptism were initiated into the mystery of faith and God. At the beginning of the ceremony, the candidates for baptism lined up outside the church facing westward, in the direction of Egypt, the realm of death. The candidates renounced evil and were then turned around in a ‘conversion’ to face east, to the dawn, new life, and to Eden, to the Garden of God. Processing into the church, they discarded their clothes, symbolically shedding their old selves and they stood naked, like Adam and Eve in the garden before the ‘Fall’. Each mystes, each one entering the Mystery, was plunged three times into the water. Each time they came up out of the water, the bishop asked, ‘Do you have pistis in the Father, in the Son and in the Holy Spirit?’ The mystes replied, ‘Pisteuo!’ (‘I give him my heart, my loyalty and my commitment.’) 7 All reference to covenant, ransom, and the example of Abraham are rooted in the very human desire to be in intimate relationship with the Divine. We must discard outdated theology, though some of the hymns are fun to sing. Religion is faith; faith is pistis; pistis is inner and communal transformation. ‘I give my heart, my loyalty, my commitment.’ Amen. 8