Reflections...

Meditations, Reflections, Bible Studies, and Sermons from Kowloon Union Church  

Everyone’s Priest

A sermon preached at Kowloon Union Church on Sunday 21 March 2021. Fifth Sunday in Lent, by Dr. Peter Youngblood. The scripture readings that day were Jeremiah 31:31-34, Hebrews 5:5-10, John 12:20-33.

Our Gospel for today opens with what we can call a “mission moment.” Some Greeks who had come to Jerusalem to celebrate the Passover decide that they want to see Jesus.

We never learn if they actually get to meet Jesus. I would like to think they do eventually, but the Scripture does not tell us the rest of their story. This is because Jesus does what he so often does—that is, he takes a small event like the arrival of some new followers and he turns it into a sign for something much more important. In this case, he declares that the time has come for the Son of Man to be “glorified.” This is where Jesus finally reveals what is going to happen to him. He gives his followers—and us—our first lesson in atonement theology: Jesus explains why and how his death his will save humankind.

In the Western tradition, the most popular atonement theory, is that in the crucifixion, Jesus basically becomes a sacrifice that atones for the sin of humankind. Another way to look at it is that Jesus’ death is a form of payment for our sins. The idea here is that it was impossible for humankind (as a whole) to ever “pay God back” for our sins, and the damage that these sins cause—damage to both ourselves, other people, and the rest of creation. So, while the sacrifice or ransom for our sin must be “paid” by a human being, only God really has the power to “pay” for such a thing. And so, to overcome this paradox we need the sacrifice of Jesus Christ, “the man who is also God.”

However, I think we focus too much on the fact that Christ will to die, and we do not focus enough on what His death will accomplish. Right now, during Lent, many of us have made sacrifices. Some of us have given up sugar or other luxuries. I have given meat, which let me say is no easy task in Hong Kong! Sometimes people give something, or do something extra, and that is very commendable as well. But I think most of us do the “sacrifice” thing—we give something up that is important to us, something that is hard for us to do without.

But the sacrifice is never the point. What we give up for Lent is the sign of something greater! Likewise, Jesus’ death will not be the point of his betrayal, trial, and execution. Rather, John makes it quite clear—more forthrightly, in my opinion, than the other Evangelists—that what is most important is what comes after the event. And what comes after, of course, is Jesus’ glorification, the time when he will be lifted up to bring judgment to the old world, and thus begin a new one.

In this new world, human beings will be forever reconciled to God. And for those choose to follow Christ, it will be more than reconciliation; it will be more than the restoration of the original Covenant. The disciples of Jesus Christ will also be “lifted up,” as “children of the light,” to be become junior partners in this very new world. A world in which peace, justice, and love reign.

It is important to realize that what Jesus does here, in John Chapter 12, is completely flip the script on death. Usually, we think of death as the end of something, right? Though Christians generally believe in an afterlife, for us death still means the ending of this life—of our life on Earth. But Christ transforms his coming death from an ending to the beginning of something new. To explain, he uses the metaphor of a grain of wheat. When the grain falls off the stem, going into the ground, it basically dies, but out from this “dead” seed blossoms a plant that can bear much more fruit.

Cleverly, Jesus’ proclamation of his own death is connected to the arrival of these new Greek potential disciples. Here death is connected to the idea of growth. Jesus predicts, quite accurately, that his coming death will lead to the growth of a movement and the birth of a Church.

But these Greeks who come to see Jesus are symbolic in another way. This is because they are ethnically Greek. They are not Greek-speaking Jews, they are gentiles. It is certainly possible, maybe even probable, that they are proselytes, or converts to the Jewish faith. But even if they were converted Jews, they would not have been seen as fully Jewish by the rest of the religious community, including some members of Jesus’ own following. But the possibility of being turned away does not stop these Greeks from wanting to meet this remarkable person they had heard of. Or perhaps it is precisely because they are converts that they really want to meet Jesus! After all, Jesus’ ministry so far has challenged the normal rules of the Jewish tradition. He has spread the message that God loves all. He loves the poor, the prostitutes, the tax collectors and—yes—even the gentiles. So those who were considered outsiders in the Jewish community would have found Jesus’ more inclusive message very attractive.

St. Paul would agree with this interpretation. Paul of Tarsus was the first great Christian cosmopolitan. He was responsible for delivering the Gospel to most of the non-Jewish world. And in our reading today from the Epistle to the Hebrews, he makes it clear that Jesus is everyone’s Messiah, not just the savior of one particular religious community. He associates Jesus with a somewhat mysterious character from all the way in the Book of Genesis. That person is Melchizedek. In Genesis, during his ramblings throughout Canaan, Abraham meets this Melchizedek who—we are told—is the King of Salem and the High Priest of the Most High God (El Elyon). Melchizedek offers bread and wine and blesses Abraham. While the Hebrew is a little unclear, most interpretations have Abraham give the priest a tithe, or offering, in return. This tithing makes it clear that Melchizedek is a very Holy figure, connected to the one, true God of Abraham.

Melchizedek does not get a lot of mention in either the Old or New Testaments, but he is important because he is first person who is explicitly named as the “High Priest of God.” A High Priest, of course, was the chief religious official in ancient Jewish religion. The High Priest and the other priests maintained the Tabernacle in the desert and the Temples later in Jerusalem. More importantly, they were responsible for the holy rituals that maintained the bonds of the Covenant between God and the Hebrews. These rituals were usually rituals of sacrifice—burnt offerings of animals or plants.

Or as Paul interprets it in the verses just before the ones we read today, the priests were responsible for offering the “gifts and sacrifices for sin.” Priests were responsible for repairing the damaged relationship between God and humankind.  But for Paul, Jesus is not just any priest, he is a true priest of the Order of the “original” priest: Melchizedek. Why does he go back that far, to the first named priest in the Torah? Why does Paul spend so much comparing Jesus to Melchizedek, a person that most would be forgiven for not even remembering? Well, for one thing, Paul does not agree with the Jewish sacrificial system that exists during his time. He is making a distinction here between Jesus and Melchizedek, on the one hand, and the traditional holders of the Priesthood, the Levites, on the other. The Levites descend from Jacob’s son, Levi, and this lineage includes Moses and Aaron. But as Paul will later point out, Jesus is of the line of Judah. The is means Jesus is descended from King David, Jesse, and Ruth the Moabite—Ruth the foreigner. So, Jesus is an outsider to the religious core of the ancient Israelite religion.

And like any ancient religion, this core was fiercely protected by laws and rituals of purity, and priestly authority came from family descent. With few exceptions, only those who descended from Aaron had spiritual power. But for Paul, this religious structure is corrupt, oppressive, and excluding. In order to break this system, the true “High Priest” cannot be a Levite, but he can be of the order of Melchizedek. Thus, the difference between Jesus Christ and traditional priests is that he is called to the priesthood not by written law or family lineage, but quite simply because God has named him as such.

And there is another reason Paul may want to make this comparison. It is notable that when we first encounter Melchizedek, he is not making an offering to God in a temple, but rather is making an offering of hospitality, food and wine to another human being, Abraham. Therefore, Melchizedek represents God’s offering to us, to humankind. Likewise, Jesus Christ is also God’s offering to us. The Levitical priests sacrificed lambs, but Jesus Christ is the lamb. He is the the God-man who will die; die not just to restore an old Covenant, but to forge a new one. This is not a Covenant based on paying God back for each and every sin, but a Covenant of mutual, self-giving love. It is a Covenant based on love, justice and peace.

And finally, this comparison tells us that Jesus Christ is the priest of all humankind. It is important not to follow Paul into his worst habits here and attack the Jewish religion. Paul uses Melchizedek as a metaphorical tool for challenging the priestly authorities of his time. He does this to convince Christians to stay committed to their beliefs, and to not leave the new Church. But today we should view it more broadly. It is not a critique of one religion, but a critique on the ancient way of doing religion, in which faith is an exclusive “club” where one must meet certain legal or ethnic requirements in order to join, and hold certain family connections to attain a high status. Quite the contrary, the Church must a be a community that welcomes all, just as it is welcoming to the Greek pilgrims we meet at the beginning of today’s Gospel reading.

So in John, Christ is not announcing his defeat, but is announcing his glory. What comes in the resurrection is not death but the glory of the birth of a new Covenant. This Covenant is not a Covenant written on paper, spelling out rules and sacrificial payments to God, but a Covenant of love written on our hearts. And it is a Covenant for all humankind, Jews and Greeks alike.

But, to conclude, we need to remember another thing that Jesus says here in John:

12:25 Those who love their life lose it, and those who hate their life in this world will keep it for eternal life. 12:26 Whoever serves me must follow me, and where I am, there will my servant be also. Whoever serves me, the Father will honor.

The very thing that will make Christ’s crucifixion not a death, but the birth of something greater, is our participation in it. We must be part of the glory Jesus speaks of. For us, our Lenten promises are not guilty payments to God for our sins, but our symbolic acceptance of our joining a new community. In this new community our own efforts are needed to create a new world of love, justice, and peace.

Amen.

# posted by Kowloon Union Church : Sunday, March 21, 2021

 
 A sermon preached at Kowloon Union Church on Sunday 14 March 2021. Fourth Sunday in Lent, by Rev Phyllis Wong. The scripture readings that day were Numbers 21:4-9; Psalm 107:1-3, 17-22; John 3:14-21.

Open prayer: God of light, shine upon us in the darkness. May Your word guide us to walk in the Way, the Truth and the Love of Christ.  May the word of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable to you, our redeemer and liberator. With a thankful heart we pray, Amen!

We have started the new year of 2021 for almost three months. We are still living in a world full of troubles and hardship. Many people are facing different struggles and challenges: health threat from cancer and Covid-19; broken relationships with family, friends and even with our own self; loss of loved ones,  loss of job and financial security; suppression of people’s freedom and civil rights, natural disasters and climate changes and something more, you name it. Many people are suffering. Our mother earth is suffering in pain too. 

No matter how devastating and broken our life, our family, our community and our world, God has never stopped healing and redeeming her people and creation.  

The readings of today taken from Numbers, Psalm and the Gospel of John have given us light that help us to face the harsh reality and life challenges with hope. 

I would begin with the story from the Book of Numbers. 

When Moses brought the Israelites out of Egypt and on their way to the promised land, they had been wandering in the wilderness. The people of Israel complaint against God and their leader Moses. Instead of giving thanks to God and Moses who had set them free from slavery, their heart was so occupied with negativity. When they saw the problems and lives were not satisfied, they lost their patience and they forgot the grace and mercy of God. They started pointing fingers instead of finding solutions together. 

What did God do with the complaints from the people? God sent poisonous serpents among the Israelites and they bit them, so that many of them died. 
Do you think God is cruel in doing it? Would there be any other better way to give the Israelites a lesson instead of killing them? Well, agree with this punishment or not, it works. The people of Israel repent and seek God’s forgiveness. God who is merciful ordered Moses to make a poisonous serpent, and set it on a pole; and everyone who is bitten shall look at it and live. The work of God in a way is strange. The snake kills but at the same time it saves. It is very ironic and paradoxical. Life is indeed ironic and full of paradox.  Just like crisis could be very bad. But it is also a great opportunity to  return to God, to make changes and experience God’s grace and blessing. There is also a saying “where you fall, there you rise up again.”

The Psalm 107 is a beautiful hymn of thanksgiving. The psalmist affirms God who is the steadfast love, He heals and saves his people. In 107:17, it says “Some were sick through their sinful ways, and because of their iniquities endured affliction”. This is a great reminder to us: sickness is not necessarily from God. Same as crisis. They could be the results of human sins and their foolish acts. Human beings have to take our full responsibility when problems and crisis arise. 

Having said that, Psalm 107 emphasizes God is steadfast love. The Psalmist does not focus on the cause of hardship, but on the restoration of those who have been victims of suffering. Healing is also the priority of God. God’s agenda is to lead the people in returning to her love and restore their lives in wholeness. In the covenant with the people, God definitely expect her people to play their part as responsible and faithful people. And yet God does not go into fault finding.  God is Love and Restoration. As God’s people with faith, let us seek God’s grace of healing and restoration, and offer our praise and thanksgiving to God. Let us be encouraged and empowered by the Word of Psalm. Here I highlight ---  107:19-20 Then they cried to the LORD in their trouble, and he saved them from their distress; 107:20 he sent out his word and healed them, and delivered them from destruction. 

107:1 – 2 “O give thanks to the LORD, for he is good; for his steadfast love endures forever. Let the redeemed of the LORD say so, those he redeemed from trouble”

I would like to take this opportunity to share my quarantine experience and how the potential crisis turn out to be a blessing and I give thanks to God.

In early February my brother in law was diagnosed with Covid-19. It was the first time I found the coronavirus was so close to me. Since my brother in law visited our home a day before he was tested positive, the Department of Health told me I had to go for mandatory quarantine. My first response was oh NO! I felt frustrating and helpless. Why me? After I settled the work in church with pastor Maggie and on the wedding arrangement with Heddy and Revd Grace Bok, I was a bit relieved as I knew that in my two weeks absence from work in the church, the services would be continued smoothly. 

My colleagues’ understanding, cooperation and support helped me to cast away my frustration and worry. They are the true light offering peace to me and to the church when I was at a time of uncertainty and anxiety. 

Many of my family members and friends took pity on me as I had to spend the Lunar New Year and my birthday in Penny’s Bay quarantine centre. But my two weeks semi-isolation turned out to be a wonderful time. 

In these two weeks, I was able to slow down and spend more time to rest and meditate. I practiced a lot of eating meditation. The silent eating led me to connect with nature. I thank the sun, the air, the water, the soil that make the plants grow. I thank the chickens and fish that sacrificed their lives to sustain my life. I thank the farmers working on the field. I thank the truck drivers bringing the food to the markets. I thank the cooks preparing the dishes. I thank the staff at the camp bringing us the food to our room. I felt so much connected to God, being united with God’s creatures human and non-human. When I meditate, I also remembered those who have been starving and those who were in hospital or prisons that could not have good food. My heart felt for them. There was a strong sense of compassion within me. With this awareness, although the kind of food had been quite repetitive, I still found the dishes very good. I realized that all things created by God are good. Nothing bad is possibly out of God. I have no reason to complain. I am thus grateful to God’s provision. Everything that is given I would consider it as God’s gift to experience her grace. And all things happened in life I will take it as an invitation for me to Know his will.  I realized that a heart that was filled with gratitude generated in me so much happiness and satisfaction.
 
When people found it miserable and terrible to be kept in isolation without freedom to go anywhere we like, I felt inner freedom within myself. I was free to read the book I bought. I was still able to open the window and see the sky outside. Comparing to those who are in prison and suffering from complete isolation, I was in a much better condition. During the quarantine, I remembered the righteous who were persecuted and put in prison. I prayed for them and I felt such a strong connection with them in spirit. At that very moment, I felt like all people who are suffering and in isolation are remembered by God. As common humanity created by God, no one is alone as we are All ONE.  That is the power of prayer.

Apart from the rich spiritual experience, I have received so many messages of love and phone calls from families and friends. Pastor Maggie’s genius and loving idea of creating the kudoboard and asked friends from the church to send me birthday greetings and message have given me great joy. I was deeply moved. Tears rolled across my face when I was reading all your messages. This was one of the best and meaningful birthday present I have ever received. I am grateful for that. All these messages are the true light shining to bring me love and joy. With this true light, I won’t be falling into darkness. Do remember, don’t underestimate the power of a little gestures of love that may bring to others especially those who are living in sadness and isolation.   

For the gospel reading today taken from John 3:14-21, what I would like to highlight is : Jesus draws on the image of the bronze serpent that brought healing to those who had been bitten in the wilderness. For the writer of the gospel of John, this is a visible sign of Jesus’ willingness to give his life to proclaim God’s healing love. God’s desire is not the condemnation of those who do wrong, but for their gracious redemption. 

The message of John 14-21 should not be taken non-Christians are not saved because they do not believe in Jesus. Quite the contrary, it is God’s call and invitation to everyone to choose light instead of darkness. Jesus Christ, the incarnate represents the Light, and He is the Light. God the Light comes to the world intending to bring restoration, reconciliation and new life for all. Gospel of John reminded us if people continue to live in darkness, they will perish. As human beings share common humanity, if one person lives in darkness and do evil, others will be definitely affected. So salvation is not just an individual matter, it matters to all humanity and the whole creation.  When we look around the world, we have seen how wicked government, people who are power hungry and with greed brought so much suffering and pain to others. 

For the health crisis of Covid-19 pandemic, economic crisis of poverty and humanitarian crisis of human rights abuses in Myanmar, the Philippines and other parts of the world, we see how terrible the world is when so many people are living in darkness. 
We have entered into the 4th Sunday in Lent today.
Lent is a time God calls us to repent. To repent is to return to God and make changes so our life will be centred in God and live more like Christ, the Light.

Lent is a time we face the darkness within and expose it to the light.

May the gospel message from John move us to choose the Light and be the Light on earth. Let the sacrificing love of Jesus on the Cross compel us never compromise with the darkness and the evil. Let us be faithful followers of Jesus Christ, to be the true light by living out our true self with small action of love and speaking the truth every day.  

May Christ’s fearless love enlighten us to live as One in the Covenant of the Cross.
 
Closing prayer

Thank you God for your steadfast love endures forever. Thank you for coming to the earth to heal and save our broken lives and our broken world. May your light shine in us and grant us eternal life and love. Help us to live a life of thanksgiving and praise. Every day may we be empowered to sing songs of joy and live out the promise of hope. Amen. 

# posted by Kowloon Union Church : Sunday, March 14, 2021

 

The Place Where God Dwells

A sermon preached at Kowloon Union Church on Sunday 7 March 2021. Third Sunday in Lent, by Rev Judy. The scripture readings that day were Psalm 19, I Cor 1:18-25, John 2:13-22

Opening Prayer: Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable to you, O Lord, my rock and my redeemer. Amen.

Many years ago, I was working in a Chinese-American church in Washington, DC. Every year on the first Saturday of October, the church opened its doors to the community in what we called the “Moon Festival”. As you can guess, it was a cultural celebration of the Mid-Autumn Festival. All the fellowship groups worked together to make Asian food to sell, we had free calligraphy and Chinese folk dance and Lion Dance by the young people. We also had what Americans call a “white elephant sale” or what you might call here a jumble sale. I thought this was a wonderful tradition for the church and everyone looked forward to it. 

Then one Moon Festival, someone from the church came into the fellowship hall where most of the activities took place. He looked around and shook his head. What’s the matter? I asked. He said quietly, it just feels like we’ve turned God’s house into a marketplace. I was taken aback. Well, it’s not like we were having it in the sanctuary or on a Sunday. After all, the Moon Festival was a way to celebrate our Chinese heritage, to reach out to our neighbors. We were also raising money for mission. Actually, I don’t think the Chinese Church in DC was guilty of turning God’s house into a marketplace. Any more than the annual Michelmas Fair at St John’s Cathedral or even our beloved KUC auction. 

But obviously the person who made the comment in the DC church was thinking of the story of Jesus cleansing the Temple. And in our Gospel lesson in John Chapter 2, granted, the Temple courtyard probably did look like a marketplace – traders, oxen, sheep, birds, cages, moneychangers, all crowded together at the high season of Passover, no doubt making a tidy profit. But, we have to ask, why were they there? Frankly, because the Temple couldn’t operate without them. The devout coming to worship had to offer an unblemished animal for sacrifice. How were they going to bring one all the way to Jerusalem? They also needed to pay the annual Temple tax to keep it running. But they couldn’t use Roman coins with the Emperor’s image. So where were they going to get the silver coins needed to make their donation? It was like moneychangers in the airport who give you local currency. For everyone there in the temple courtyard, then, there was nothing wrong with providing essential services at a convenient location to people who needed them. If anyone thought otherwise, then call it a ‘necessary evil’ for the sake of a higher purpose.

In this context, then, how should we understand Jesus’ anger and actions on that day? 

I think the best way to understand the Cleansing of the Temple is to correct some common misunderstandings we have of this famous story. We’ve already said it’s not a critique of church bazaars and fundraisers. What else do we get wrong about this critical event in the life of Jesus?  Today, I’m going to address three major misunderstandings we have of the Cleansing of the Temple. Because in order to understand what something is about, we also have to know what it’s not about. Does that make sense? I hope so. Here we go … 

1. Misunderstanding #1: The Cleansing of the Temple was a spur of the moment act of passion. Jesus walked into the Temple Courtyard and was so disgusted by what he saw, he just exploded. That’s possible, of course, but does that really make sense? Think about it, this is the same Temple Jesus had loved and been going to all his life. It was where he was taken to be dedicated as a baby by Mary and Joseph. It was where his parents found him when he was only 12 years old talking with the elders. As part of a devout Jewish family, he would have come to the Temple every year. He knew what to expect.

So, rather than Jesus suddenly losing his temper on a bad day, scholars say that he must have planned all this ahead of time. This was a strategic move he knew would ‘rock the boat’. But he was determined to challenge the authorities and the status quo at this critical moment.

That means the Cleansing of the Temple was what we would call an act of civil disobedience. That’s right. Jesus was actively refusing to participate in a system that was unjust and unholy. And just what was wrong with the system? Well for one thing, the Temple during Jesus’ time was the one built by Herod, the Roman ruler over the Jews. Solomon’s Temple had long been destroyed, so this was the 2nd Temple. Herod allowed it to be rebuilt to keep the Jews quiet. But make no mistake. The Jews could have their Temple only as long as the Romans allowed it. And if there was any doubt about that, a statue of a golden eagle was prominently placed over the Temple entrance, the symbol of the mighty Roman Empire.

Then, the system for worship in the Temple itself was highly unequal. Males were segregated from females, priests were separated from laypeople, rich were distinguished from the poor, Jews had privileged access denied to Gentiles. The Temple was supposed to be the place that linked heaven and earth. Could this Temple truly be the place where all creation could proclaim ‘God is here’? No, it couldn’t.

So, in a dramatic show of divine prerogative, Jesus not only cleansed the Temple. . . he declared the whole sacrificial system null and void. That’s why he drove out the animals, overturned the moneychangers’ tables, ordered the doves out of his Father’s house. This marketplace was no longer needed. Because the place to find God would no longer be in a building in Jerusalem, but in the person of Jesus Christ. He is the place where God would dwell, the place where sins would be forgiven, the place where the separation between God and humanity would be overcome. 

So, now we understand the Cleansing of the Temple wasn’t a spontaneous outburst on the part of Jesus. It was instead a profound prophetic act calling everyone to the true worship of God. And in so doing, Jesus also foreshadowed his own death and resurrection – the Temple that would be destroyed by man on Good Friday but raised up by God on Easter morn.

2. Ok, well and good. We got it.  But that brings up the 2nd thing many people misunderstand.  And that is Jesus used violence to cleanse the Temple. This bothers a lot of people and it should. If you look at some of the famous paintings of this story, they’re pretty terrifying. Jesus is lashing out at everyone and everything. People are cowering around him, some collapsed on the ground, women and children fleeing from the scene. What’s going on here? Didn’t Jesus preach loving your enemy and turning the other cheek? Why does the Prince of Peace resort to violence to make his point and in the House of God of all places? Doesn’t that make Jesus a hypocrite? 

Even worse, there are Christians who applaud this tough guy image of the Savior. No Jesus meek and mild for them. In fact, the church for two millennia has used the Cleansing of the Temple to justify Christians using violence, to sanction Christian violence in the service of God. John 2:13-22 has been quoted to justify everything from the medieval Crusades to ‘just war’ theory to execution of heretics.  Even recently, I read of a pastor in the US, who’s also a policeman, preaching about violence in the line of duty as “righteous release”. 

Hypocrite? Righteous release? Let’s clear this up once and for all. 

According to John, Jesus made a whip out of ropes that had been used to tie up the animals. He didn’t bring weapons into the premise. Then, he used the whip to drive the cattle and sheep out of the Temple. How else could he get them to move? With his hands? The Bible never says Jesus used the whip to injure animals or people. In fact, he saved the animals that day from being slaughtered. And if he had dared injure someone in the Temple, he would have been arrested on the spot. So, there’s no biblical evidence that Jesus ever hurt beast, birds or bodies in cleansing the Temple. 

But, and listen carefully, Jesus did use force. Jesus did use force to make his point. And his point was to force the hand of the secular and religious leaders, thus setting the scene for the inevitable conclusion – the Crucifixion. As it says in Scripture, zeal for your house will consume me. So those paintings of the Cleansing of the Temple are partially accurate – Jesus was angry and he did take forceful action. But he didn’t compromise his principles, he didn’t harm a living creature, and he never condoned violence as ‘righteous release’. We have to get the whole picture right. Otherwise, we’re simply preaching “peace, peace where there is no peace.” 

3. Which brings us to the 3rd and final misunderstanding. And that is what the Cleansing of the Temple means for us today. We tend to put the Cleansing of the Temple in the category of one-off events that happened 2000 years ago in Jerusalem. But for today’s Gospel story to really hit home, we need to understand how what happened that day still impacts us now. Because the Cross was not only meant to bridge the gap between the Temple in Jerusalem and the Temple of Jesus’ body. The Cross was meant to fling open the door of Christ’s Temple to you and me and everyone. You see, God’s ultimate plan was not just that Jesus would be the place where God dwells, but that your body and my body and this body (the church) could also be the place where God dwells – in other words – we are a Temple of the Living God. Do you see what this means then?  

Jesus not only needed to cleanse the Temple in Bible times. He comes again and again to cleanse our Temple in our time, our lives, our church, our world. We are just as guilty of compromise with ‘necessary evils’ and the Powers that be. We are just as guilty of favoring the few over the many. We are just as guilty as anyone in the Temple that day except we understand…we understand what Jesus meant when He said, “Destroy this Temple and I will raise it up in three days.” And we believe. That’s why we are not just the objects of Jesus’ anger. We are also the subjects of His saving grace. Because the Cleansing of the Temple at heart is about the sacrifice of Christ on the Cross for your sins and mine – and thanks be to God that’s so, for “the message about the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.”

On this 3rd Sunday in Lent, let me close my message with powerful words from Malcolm Guite, an English poet and Anglican priest. Here he pleads for Christ to come once more to cleanse the Temple – our Temple – because we still need God’s saving grace more than ever in this year of our Lord 2021, don’t we?  Let’s pray:

Come to your Temple here with liberation
And overturn these tables of exchange
Restore in me my lost imagination
Begin in me for good, the pure change.
Come as you came, an infant with your mother,
That innocence may cleanse and claim this ground
Come as you came, a boy who sought his father
With questions asked and certain answers found,
Come as you came this day, a man in anger
Unleash the lash that drives a pathway through
Face down for me the fear the shame the danger
Teach me again to whom my love is due.
Break down in me the barricades of death
And tear the veil in two with your last breath. AMEN. 

# posted by Kowloon Union Church : Sunday, March 07, 2021

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Archived sermons by the Barksdales

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